Jais backs court decision
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/7/nation/17648018&sec=nation
BY LOONG MENG YEE
PETALING JAYA: The Selangor Islamic Religious Department (Jais) is supportive of the High Court decision allowing a Hindu husband to take custody of his six children although his wife remains a Muslim after they separated.
“We go by the facts. In this case, the fact of the matter was the children had Hindu names and never practised Islam.
“This fact was supported by documentation and Jais accepts the reasons,” said Jais public relations officer Fakrul Azam Yahya yesterday.
Fakrul was asked to comment on a recent case at the Shah Alam High Court where rubber tapper P. Marimuthu won custody of his children – after his Muslim wife agreed to allow him to raise them as Hindus.
Raimah Bibi Noordin, 39, claimed in an affidavit that she was born a Muslim and wished to profess the faith. However, she had no objection to hand over her children – whose religion is stated as Hindu in their birth certificates – to be raised by their father.
Marimuthu, 41, had filed a habeas corpus application last month claiming Jais officers had forcibly taken his wife and children from their home in Kampung Baru Tambahan, Ulu Yam Lama on April 2.
He alleged the officers did not give any reason why Raimah and the children were being detained. He also claimed the officers had threatened to arrest and charge him with khalwat (close proximity) if he tried to stop them.
Last Thursday, Marimuthu was granted custody of the children and he withdrew the habeas corpus case.
Fakrul clarified it was Raimah who had called Jais for help and said that Jais officers never threatened Marimuthu with khalwat.
“Khalwat is only applicable on Muslims. The children were taken because we have not established their religion at that point. It is the duty of Jais to protect Muslims in distress,” said Fakrul.
Although it was the norm for mothers to be allowed custody of the children below 16-year-old, Fakrul said Jais agreed with the court decision to allow the father to care for the children after it was established that the children never practised Islam.
Posts Tagged ‘Religion’
Jais backs court decision
May 7th, 2007
Marimuthu’s Saga…Kids return, but how can we help?
May 5th, 20071. What is the status of the children? Anak luar nikah since marriage is not legal? 2. What is the mother name in the birth certificate? 3. Is the religion stated as Hindu in birth cert? 4. What we can do to help Marimuthu and his family? Eldest son not schooling; they don’t have enough food? Will they later regret staying true to their religion when after all the noise, they still end up alone and poor? I mean, if they converted, help will come from all quarters. 5. Can the couple get married legally without either one converting? 6. Is Raimah to be penalised for “khalwat/zina”?
Who can answer this? Lawyers? MHS? Cabinet? PM? Samy Vellu? Jabatan Agama Islam? Jabatan Pendaftaran?
Whatever it is, the way the department handled this issue, with the video clip of Al Jazeera program available all over the net and newspapers highlighting this, it is indeed a slap in the face for Islam in Malaysia. Even if the religion is acceptable, the followers really make a mess out of it. We are more worried now than before.
Marimuthu gets his ‘snatched’ children back By : Teresa Yong
BATANG KALI: Last night, after 33 days of separation, rubber tapper P. Marimuthu was finally reunited with his six children.
His sad face broke into a smile as all his children rushed to hug and greet him as they reached their family home in Kampung Stesyen Tambahan, Ulu Yam Lama here.
His youngest son, Kaberan, 4, clung to him and played with his earlobes, which he habitually does when he goes to bed with Marimuthu.
Similarly, Shamala, 5, was also clingy, while the older ones, Yoogenaswary, 13, Paramila, 11, Hariharan, 8, and Ravindran, 6, were all smiling and happy to pose for the press.
“I will sleep easy tonight. I have not been sleeping and eating since they were taken away (by the Selangor Islamic Religious Department) officials on April 2). “I will look after them with the help of my oldest son Muniswaran,” said Marimuthu.
The separation came about after Marimuthu and his companion, Raimah Bibi Noordin, reached a settlement at the High Court in Shah Alam on Wednesday.
Marimuthu and Raimah had spent 21 years together and had seven children but they were not legally married.
In the court, Raimah, 39, said she was a born Muslim and would remain one.
Marimuthu can now raise his children in the Hindu faith, while Raimah, in return, has been given absolute access to her children at any time.
Their son Muniswaran, 14, who had dropped out of school, said he would take care of his siblings when his father was at work.
Asked how they would cope, he said: “We can eat porridge as long as we stay together as a family.”
Selangor state legal adviser Datuk Zauyah B. Loth Khan, who appeared for Jais, did not object to the agreement in court.
Respecting the Constitution
May 3rd, 2007Respecting the Constitution
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/3/focus/17612391&sec=focus
Reflecting on the Law: By SHAD SALEEM FARUQI .
Freedom of religion is not absolute, but subject to general laws relating to public order, public health or morality. Part 2 of a two-part article.
THE right to convert out of one’s faith and to adopt another is an implicit part of freedom of conscience in all developed constitutional states.
But in the special context of Malaysia, where there is a unique, fascinating link between Islam and Malay identity, apostasy arouses deep emotions. Any attempt by a Muslim to renounce his faith is seen as a threat to the whole community.
How many murtad (apostates) there are in the country is not known. Some religious leaders have made wild allegations of hundreds of thousands.
But data gathered by UiTM scholar Dr Azam Adil gives some indication. He found that from1994 to 2003, Syariah Courts in Negri Sembilan granted renunciation certificates to 16 applicants, most of whom were former converts to Islam.
Till the 1980s Muslim Law Enactments in several states recognised apostasy by imposing a simple registration requirement on all who enter the faith and all who exit from it. But in the 80s with Islamisation catching on, the unilateral right to register a renunciation was repealed.
In some states, legislation was enacted to require anyone seeking to convert out of Islam to be subjected to compulsory counselling and rehabilitation procedures for prescribed durations.
In other states, a Muslim’s membership of the ummah was regarded as irrevocable. Any attempt at apostasy was an insult to Islam and punished criminally.
The second approach does not harmonise with other rules of the legal system..
First, in all states, the syariah authorities possess a power to excommunicate Muslims from the fold. From time to time, state religious authorities have brought down the axe on the Qadiyani, the Ismaili, the Ahmadiya and the Ithna Ashari.
Obviously, one’s status as a Muslim is not eternal. It can be lost or forfeited.
Second, the criminalisation approach violates the freedom of conscience clause in the Constitution. The civil courts are near unanimous that under our basic charter, a Muslim does have a right to convert. But he cannot do it unilaterally. He must first obtain a Syariah Court certificate of renunciation.
The problem is that most syariah courts fail to act on such applications and would-be converts spend years in legal limbo.
A wide gap has developed between constitutional theory and the realities on the ground. Nevertheless, one must not lose sight of constitutional fundamentals.
When our document of destiny was being drafted, no consideration was given to the idea of a theocracy (supremacy of God’s law). Instead, a supreme Constitution was adopted by Article 4(1).
Islam is the religion of the Federation, but other religions may be practised in peace and harmony (Article 3(1)).
The implication of Article 3 is that unlike in secular states, Federal and State governments in Malaysia may promote Islamic education, set up Islamic institutions and incorporate Islamic policies in the administration.
However, though Islam is the religion of the Federation, Malaysia is not an Islamic state. The syariah is not the basic law of the land. The Constitution is supreme. The syariah applies only to Muslims and that, too, in areas demarcated by the Constitution in Schedule 9, List II, Item 1.
Further, Article 3 (on Islam) does not extinguish any thing else in the Constitution. Article 3(4) provides that “Nothing in this Article derogates from any other provision of this Constitution”. This means that Article 3 cannot be employed to challenge the validity of a drug trafficking law on the ground that some of its provisions were un-Islamic (Che Omar Che Soh (1988)).
Nor can Article 3 be relied on to trump any other constitutional provision – whether on fundamental rights or the system of parliamentary government or Malay privileges or the position of the Sultans or the special rights of the people of Sabah and Sarawak.
The Constitution is its own justification for being and does not need validation from any other source.
According to Article 11(1) “Every person has the right to profess and practise his religion and, subject to clause (4), to propagate it.” The guarantee of Article 11(1) applies to all persons including Muslims.
In Minister vs Jamaluddin Othman (1989), a preventive detention order on the ground that a convert out of Islam was involved in propagating Christianity among Muslims was held to be illegal.
Freedom of religion is, of course, not absolute. All religious freedom is subject to general laws relating to “public order, public health or morality” (Article 11(5)).
Who may enact these laws? Laws on public order and public health must be enacted by the Federal Parliament because these topics are in the Federal List. But laws on morality may be enacted by State Assemblies as well.
What about State laws criminalising apostasy? They are not protected by Article 11(5) because apostasy per se is not condemned anywhere in the Constitution.
Perhaps Schedule 9 List II Item 1 could envelope these aqida (articles of faith) laws? This Schedule permits State Assemblies to create and punish “offences by persons professing the religion of Islam against precepts of that religion, except in regard to matters included in the Federal List ?”
In relation to State powers under Schedule 9 the following factors must be taken note of:
·The Legislative Lists in Schedule 9 are subject to the chapter on fundamental rights and cannot violate Article 11;
·State powers to legislate on Islam are limited and derived and cannot violate the supreme Constitution. One must remember that Article 3(4) clearly indicates that the provision on Islam does not derogate from any other provision of the Constitution;
·The criminal law power of the states applies against persons professing the religion of Islam. If a person of sane mind and legal capacity formally declares that he no longer professes a faith, it is constitutionally difficult to subject him to the religion he has renounced. All that can be required is a formal procedural requirement of renunciation; and
·The power of the states to enact criminal laws cannot apply to matters included in the Federal List. Public order is in the Federal List and acts of belligerency by murtad must be punished under the Federal Penal Code and not under State aqida laws.
In sum, it can be stated that, looking at the Constitution as a whole, it is clear that Article 3(1) on Islam does not displace constitutional supremacy. Article 3(4) itself declares that nothing in this Article derogates from anything in this Constitution.
The power of the States to legislate on Islam in Schedule 9 cannot be exercised in disregard of fundamental rights or in transgression of Federal legislative power on public order.
It is a flagrant violation of the Constitution as drafted in 1957 to imprison someone for his religious belief. Any argument to the contrary is a radical, revisionist and medieval re-interpretation of our cherished basic charter.
Anyone who stands in the shade of the Constitution has to concede that under the present constitutional order apostasy per se cannot be criminalised. But prosecution of belligerent apostates who disturb the peace or cause offence under section 298 of the Penal Code is perfectly constitutional.
In the special circumstances of Malaysia, apostasy has significant legal, political, social and economic consequences. A Muslim apostate will lose his Malay status. His marriage will be dissolved. Painful questions of custody and guardianship and of Malay privileges will arise.
It is reasonable, therefore, that a unilateral act of renunciation is not enough. A formal application for change of status must be made followed by a mandatory procedure for investigation, counselling and consultation (but not adjudication).
There should be no detention for purpose of counselling. This is similar to the procedure for seeking dissolution of marriage.
But the syariah authorities must be required to complete the investigation and counselling within statutory time frames so that the applicant can get on with his life and not remain suspended in a legal limbo. If the intending apostate cannot be won over through love, then the apostate should be ex-communicated and this should be recorded and registered.
In matters of religion, the naked, criminal power of the state should not be employed. This is also the exquisite message of the Quran.
Dr Shad Faruqi is Professor of Law at UiTM.
NEWS:Legal temples not demolished, says Khir
April 25th, 2007Legal temples not demolished, says Khir
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/25/nation/17541517&sec=nation
SELANGOR Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Khir Toyo refuted an opposition allegation that the state government had demolished legally-built Hindu temples, the Tamil Nesan said.
At a talk organised by the Indian Progressive Front in Batang Berjuntai, Dr Khir said the state only acted against temples that were illegally built or not constructed according to specifications.
He said that he had given land with nominal premiums and also provided an allocation for the building or expansion of temples.
He urged the Indian voters of Ijok, especially those of the Hindu faith, not to be taken in by such allegations.
Dr Khir said that he appreciated the Indian community and would look into the welfare of every resident of the state, regardless of race or religion.
Malaysia’s Islamic officials seize baby from mother who sought a Hindu life
April 24th, 2007Malaysia's Islamic officials seize baby from mother who sought a Hindu life
The Associated Press
Published: April 6, 2007
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Islamic authorities took away the baby of a Muslim woman who is living as a Hindu in defiance of the law in the latest case of religious conflict straining ties in multiethnic Malaysia, officials said Friday.
Revathi Masoosai's 15-month-old daughter was taken by the Islamic Religious Department in southern Malacca state on March 26 and handed to Revathi's Muslim mother, said department enforcement officer Mohamad Imran Ahmad.
"The baby's grandmother has custody of her for now," Mohamad Imran told The Associated Press.
Revathi, an ethnic Indian, is being held in a rehabilitation center run by Islamic authorities for her religious transgression. The baby was with Revathi's husband when she was seized. He has filed a police complaint, but it was not clear if he plans to take the case to court.
Meanwhile, the baby will stay with her grandmother. "When the baby's mother is released, she can try to regain custody if she wants to," said Mohamad Imran without elaborating.
The case, which was made public by the opposition Democratic Action Party on Thursday, highlights an increasing number of spats affecting the religious and family rights of the ethnic Indian and Chinese minorities.
Indians, who form about 8 percent of Malaysia's 26 million people, are mostly Hindus while some are Christians, Muslims and Sikhs.
Activists say a string of recent disputes have ended in favor of Muslims – who comprise nearly 60 percent of the population – and strained ethnic relations in this multicultural nation, which has enjoyed racial peace for nearly four decades.
Revathi, 29, was born to Indian Muslim parents who gave her a Muslim name, Siti Fatimah. However, Revathi claims she was raised as a Hindu by her grandmother and changed her name in 2001, said Chong Eng, an opposition member of Parliament.
Revathi married Suresh Veerappan in 2004 according to Hindu rites. The marriage has not been legally registered because Suresh would have had to convert to Islam first.
Revathi's official identification documents state she is Muslim because Malaysians who are born as Muslims cannot legally convert.
The Islamic Religious Department apparently learned of Revathi's case after she gave birth. Revathi was detained in January and taken to a rehabilitation center in central Malaysia where she is expected to be held until at least mid-April to undergo religious counseling, Chong said.
"Separating mother and child … is inhuman," Chong said in a statement.
A custody battle would be complicated because Islamic officials and Revathi's mother would likely seek to try the case in Islamic Shariah court, which handles religious, family and personal law disputes involving Muslims.
Non-Muslims turn to civil courts to settle these issues. But the secular courts have generally avoided taking a position in such disputes between Muslims and non-Muslims, leaving it to the Shariah system, where verdicts have often favored Muslims.
LATEST DEVELOPMENT
Revathi Masoosai/Siti Fatimah's 100-day detention for Islamic rehabilitation which ends today has been extended by the Malacca Syariah Court for another 80 days.
Revathi's husband, Suresh Veerapan was informed by Malacca Syariah Court officials that her detention at the Faith Rehabilitation Centre in Ulu Yam has been extended by 80 days.
When Suresh Veerapan asked for the reasons, an official told him "she did not cooperate during the 100-day stay" which ended today.
His demand for a copy of the court order on the extension was denied. Revathi was not brought to the Malacca court from Ulu Yam in Selangor. Dozens of relatives were waiting to see her.
Revathi, who suffers from asthma, had told her husband last week that she was not taken to a doctor although she was sick.
It is sad and tragic that this heart-rending tale of the father, mother and baby girl being forcibly separated into three different locations by law and religion had not been resolved today, despite a memorandum by DAP MPs to the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi last week.