{"id":7079,"date":"2005-10-17T20:36:25","date_gmt":"2005-10-17T12:36:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sistersinislam.org\/?p=7079"},"modified":"2019-10-07T20:36:48","modified_gmt":"2019-10-07T12:36:48","slug":"memorandum-to-the-government-on-repeal-of-the-syariah-criminal-offences-act-based-on-constitutional-and-islamic-legal-theory-and-practice-perspectives","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sistersinislam.org\/memorandum-to-the-government-on-repeal-of-the-syariah-criminal-offences-act-based-on-constitutional-and-islamic-legal-theory-and-practice-perspectives\/","title":{"rendered":"Memorandum to the Government on Repeal of the Syariah Criminal Offences Act based on Constitutional and Islamic Legal Theory and Practice Perspectives"},"content":{"rendered":"

Memorandum to the Government on Repeal of the Syariah Criminal Offences Act based on Constitutional and Islamic Legal Theory and Practice Perspectives <\/b><\/p>\n

Submitted by Sisters in Islam to the Minister in the Prime Minister\u2019s Department and to the Attorney-General on 17 October 2005 <\/i><\/p>\n

This memorandum is submitted to the Government of Malaysia to reiterate our call for the Syariah Criminal Offences laws to be repealed on the grounds that they have no basis in Islamic legal theory and practice; they conflict with the Federal Constitution and that they conflict or overlap with the Penal Code and other federal laws.<\/p>\n

We hope the Attorney-General\u2019s Chambers in conducting the review will seriously consider the compelling arguments presented below, put forward by Professor Muhammad Hashim Kamali and Prof Shad Saleem Faruqi, from two studies commissioned by Sisters In Islam (SIS).<\/p>\n

Background <\/b><\/p>\n

The Syariah Criminal Offences legislation was first introduced in the mid-1990s in the various states and federal territories. But it was not until 1997 that the gravity of the laws introduced became public knowledge when three young Muslim women taking part in a beauty contest were arrested and charged for violating a fatwa and for indecent dressing.<\/p>\n

As a result of the public outcry over the arrest, Sisters in Islam conducted a research and consulted scholars on Islamic and constitutional laws. SIS submitted a memorandum to the Government on the Syariah Criminal Offence Act and Fundamental Liberties in August 1997 where we raised our concerns on several areas criminalised by the law:<\/p>\n

1. It is a crime for a Muslim to defy, disobey or dispute a fatwa once it is gazetted.<\/p>\n

2. It is a crime for a Muslim to print, publish, distribute, or possess books contrary to Hukum Syarak.<\/p>\n

3. It is a crime to insult Islam or the religious authorities. What constitutes an \u201cinsult to Islam\u201d is not defined. In the case of one pub singer, being in a place that served alcohol constituted an insult to Islam;<\/p>\n

4. It is a crime to act or behave in an indecent manner in any public place. What constitutes \u201cindecent manner\u201d is not defined. It has included to \u201chold a woman’s waist in a shopping complex\u201d and \u201csit closely together and hold hands\u201d. Hundreds of Muslim women and men, mostly young, have been arrested and charged under this provision.<\/p>\n