Posts Tagged ‘Subashini’

calling all malaysian to pray this week!!! – MCCBCHST organised week-long prayer for non-muslims

April 3rd, 2007
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Pls spread this news – can refer to Sun paper (2/4 and 3/4).

finally, MCCBCHST is doing something about this. let’s all join in and support them. many of us argue on the forums abt the injustice happening to Hindus, Christians, Buddhists, Taosists, Sikhs, etc. Let’s show our support and join in the prayer sessions. fill up the churches, temples, gurdwaras.

It will be great if MCCBCHST can come out with arm bands or car stickers to support this event.

all this happening due to the cowardly act of the husband (saravanan) who misuse islam. his action just spoil the religion’s name. hopefully the rest of the muslims realise this. ms subashini will be better off without him.

m poobalan
www.poobalan.com/blog
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Religious Council: Prayers not move to undermine Islam, Muslims
Subashini files appeal to Federal Court

Maria J.Dass

http://www.sun2surf.com/article.cfm?id=17482

PETALING JAYA (April 2, 2007): The initiative by non-Muslim groups to hold prayers for and read out letters nationwide in support of justice, fairness and respect for their constitutional rights is not meant to undermine Islam or Muslims, the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism (MCCBCHST) said.

Instead, the efforts are to create awareness among non-Muslims regarding recent court judgments, and help them understand the implications of conversion to Islam.

Council president Datuk Chee Peck Kiat said the initiatives had also received support from Muslims, including from Sisters in Islam (SIS) and Umno MP Datuk Zaid Ibrahim, noting that they had spoken up on the injustices caused by the lack of religious freedom, and the recent civil court decision to direct non-Muslims to the syariah court.

“We urge all fair minded Malaysians, irrespective of their religion, to voice their grievances against this injustice through proper and peaceful channels, and to do all that is possible, and pray that justice and freedom of religion be restored,” he said today.

He was speaking in a press conference to launch a series of special prayers following the March 13 Court of Appeal judement directing R. Subashini, a Hindu, to seek recourse through the syariah court.

The court, in a majority decision, had also dismissed SubashiniÂ’s appeal to stop her Muslim-convert husband, Muhammad Shafi Saravanan Abdullah, from going to the syariah court to dissolve their civil marriage, seek custody of their children and unilaterally convert their young child.

However last Friday (March 30), the same bench granted Subashini an interim injunction preventing her husband from proceeding with his case in the syariah court pending the disposal of her application to the Federal court.

“The fact that the wife has been granted temporary respite by the court does not detract from the seriousness of the original decision,” Chee said.

In a statement today, SIS said the Muslim group believed in justice and the non-discrimination of people of other faiths as enshrined in Islam.

“We support any initiative that affirms the supremacy of the Constitution that has been agreed by all ethnic groups in Malaysia,” SIS said.

The prayer sessions by MCCBCHST over this week will coincide with the Christian Holy Week, the Hindu and Tamil New Year, and Cheng Beng (ChineseÂ’s All Souls Day).

Christian Federation of Malaysia executive secretary Rev. Dr Hermen Shastri said: “We will pray that the government will be moved by moral conscience to rectify the situation, by upholding laws in the Constitution.”

The Buddhist community will also hold prayer sessions over the next three months during the full moon.

“Our devotees have to understand these issues, that once you enter (convert to Islam), it is very difficult to leave,” Malaysian Buddhist Association adviser Ng Hong Pau said.

Let common sense prevail- wong chun wai

April 2nd, 2007
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interesting article by star editor: datuk WONG CHUN WAI.
 
i think what he wrote reflects majority of malaysians’ view.
 
 

Let common sense prevail

On The Beat
By WONG CHUN WAI

Any divorce is a messy affair. But when one spouse is a Muslim and custody of the children is involved, it gets even more complicated. 

FORGET about the complexities of the law and even the politics of race and religion. The story of R. Subashini is a simple heart-wrenching tale of a woman who is fighting for the custody of her two young children – a tussle resulting from her husbandÂ’s desire to end their marriage. 

While divorces are common, hers is complicated. Her husband of five years became a Muslim convert without her knowledge and he has also converted their three-year-old son. They have another two-year-old child. 

All Subashini, 28, wants is to keep her two children and end their marriage in a civil court. Her husband, businessman Muhammad Shafi Abdullah, formerly T. Saravanan, 31, has instead applied to the Syariah court to end their civil marriage.  

There are dire consequences. First, she is worried that as a non-Muslim mother fighting to keep her children, the odds could be against her in a Syariah Court. Her son has become a Muslim, she claims, without her knowledge. The boy converted to Islam with Saravanan last May. 

Second, as a non-Muslim, she should not be seeking redress in a Syariah Court because the Federal Constitution clearly states so. Should we no longer take this legal document seriously? 

But more worrying for non-Muslims is that this unprecedented move could be the basis for future cases involving non-Muslim and Muslim parties. Even Muslim lawyers and experts have expressed their worries. 

As lawyer Datuk Zaid Ibrahim wrote in a newspaper article on the case: “Even if Subashini wants to submit to the Syariah Court, she canÂ’t. Jurisdiction is not a question of choice or submission; it is a question of law.”  

A seemingly straightforward court case has grown increasingly difficult, with self-proclaimed defenders of faiths getting into the picture, because the Court of Appeal has given the impression that it wants to wash its hands off the case. 

On March 13, the Court of Appeal decided that Subashini had to seek redress at the Syariah Court for the break-up of her family and the custody of her children, one of whom has become a Muslim. 

It would have been much easier had Saravanan first divorced Subashini, settle child custody and property matters under civil law before he converted to Islam. But that was not the case. 

Instead, he has taken a different route, best known to himself, and put the whole family into a tight spot. At the same time, the legal implications of his case have put the rest of the nation in a tight spot. 

Last week, Subashini won a minor victory – she obtained the green light from the Court of Appeal to preserve her civil rights, pending her appeal to the Federal Court 

Given the sensitivity of religious matters, the case is now in the spotlight as the nation watches how the Bench intends to resolve this legal wrangle to the satisfaction of everyone. 

We donÂ’t need to be lawyers and law professors to know that the Federal Constitution clearly stipulates that the Syariah Court has no jurisdiction over non-Muslims. ItÂ’s that simple.  

Even if Subashini agrees to take her case to the Syariah Court, she cannot do so. It does not matter whether she would get a fair or biased hearing at the Syariah Court. That is beside the point and should not even be a matter for debate. 

To suggest that non-Muslims should not fear the Syariah Court and that they must accept the purported political-religious reality, as some quarters have implied, is grossly unfair and totally unrelated to the core of the issue.  

No one would argue over the ability of the Syariah Court to dispense justice but the position of civil laws and the Federal Constitution is clear. That is why it is sometimes referred to as the common law, which means laws applicable to Muslims and non-Muslims. 

But more importantly, as the nation awaits to celebrate the countryÂ’s 50th anniversary, we have a right to ask ourselves what our founding fathers, who had spent endless hours writing the Federal Constitution, would have thought of this case. 

The Federal Constitution, we are aware, was part of the social contract agreed on by the founding fathers, and certainly any move that violates or even dilutes the status of the Federal Constitution is of serious concern. 

But more importantly, surely the civil courts are in a position to provide the solution to SubashiniÂ’s problem. As Zaid correctly pointed out: “Surely the son is as much hers as it is his and shouldnÂ’t the motherÂ’s wishes be taken into account in an important matter such as the faith of her child, especially when he is so young? 

“We have had many arguments put forward by those who are experts in the law but these people do not have to endure the pain and suffering undergone by Subashini.” 

Let common sense prevail. We are sure Malaysians are able to handle SubashiniÂ’s case with justice and compassion. After all, that is what the law is all about for those who seek legal redress.

NEWS:Stay against Syariah proceedings

March 31st, 2007
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will this be considered as interfering with syariah courts?
the plot thickens…

Stay against Syariah proceedings http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/3/31/courts/17314381&sec=courts
By CHELSEA L.Y. NG
PUTRAJAYA: R. Subashini, who was told to go to the Syariah Court to fight for her matrimonial rights, obtained a temporary injunction from the Court of Appeal to preserve her civil rights pending her appeal to the Federal Court.
In a majority judgment, Justices Gopal Sri Ram, Suriyadi Halim Omar and Hassan Lah, who heard Subashini’s application yesterday, granted an injunction preventing her husband, who had converted to become a Muslim, from initiating or continuing with any proceedings in the syariah courts or converting their younger son. Justice Suriyadi dissented.
Subashini’s lead counsel Malik Imtiaz Sarwar had argued that the injunction was important because even if the Federal Court were to decide in her favour later, the judgment would be rendered academic if the husband, T. Saravanan, was allowed to get a final order of divorce from the syariah court first.
“All I am asking for is the preservation of status quo. The Syariah Court orders, if not stopped, will cause my client severe prejudice,” said Malik.
Justice Suriyadi then asked: “Has there been any attempt to convert the second child since the day we gave judgment?”
Malik: “Not that we know of. Perhaps my learned friend for the respondent can shed more light on this.”
Justice Suriyadi: “This is your case. You show me. I am looking at things in a rather clinical manner. You want an injunction you must show to me why it should be granted. I do not want to be set by external factors. I asked, are there any changes, and you said ‘No’. So, status quo is the same.”
Justice Sri Ram then asked Malik whether there was any custody issue involved, to which the counsel said that his client was a mother who would be deprived of her right to custody of her children if her husband succeeded.
Haniff Khatri Abdulla, who acted for Saravanan, then said the injunction bid was “another attempt to restrain the husband from reaping the fruits of a judgment in his favour”.
Haniff then said that the panel could not grant an injunction now since it had earlier affirmed the setting aside of an interim injunction granted to Subashini when it dismissed her appeal on March 13.
Haniff: “It amounts to the court reviewing its own decision.”
Justice Sri Ram: “Nonsense. This is a fresh application. We are not reviewing. We are asking you to prevent the husband from pursuing his case in the other court pending his wife’s appeal to the Federal Court.”
On March 13, the same panel had in a majority judgment ordered Subashini to battle out her divorce and custody claims at the Syariah Court.
Earlier on Sept 25 last year, Judicial Commissioner Aziah Ali set aside the injunction granted to 28-year-old Subashini a month earlier, which had enabled her to temporarily restrain Saravanan, 31, from commencing with the proceedings in the Syariah Court.
The couple, who has yet to finalise their divorce, has two children, Dharvin Joshua, three, and one-year-old Sharvin.
Saravanan, whose Muslim name is Muhammad Shafi Abdullah, claims that the elder child had converted to Islam with him in May.
Later yesterday, Subashini’s solicitor K. Shanmugam filed her application for leave to appeal to the Federal Court.

CFM Press Statement

March 28th, 2007
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Dear friends,
The following statement was released to the press this morning. CFM sees the recent court of appeal’s decision of the Subashini’s case as worrying. The civil courts continues to insist that the non-converting spouse find redress in syariah courts. This is clearly unconstitutional.
The MCCBCHST has also prepared a press statement to indicate to the nation that non-Muslim communities are not prepared to accept non-Muslim appearing before syariah courts.
Kindly circulate far this and wide.
sincerely, Rev. Dr. Hermen Shastri Executive Secretary, CFM General Secretary, CCM
CHRISTIAN FEDERATION OF MALAYSIA (PERSEKUTUAN KRISTIAN MALAYSIA) Address: 26, Jalan Universiti , 46200 Petaling Jaya, Selangor Darul Ehsan,
Malaysia Telephone: (03) 7957 1278, (03) 7957 1463, Fax: (03) 7957 1457 Email: cchurchm@streamyx.com
CFM PRESS STATEMENT
The Christian Federation of Malaysia views with great concern the recent decision of the Court of Appeal in the case of Subashini v. Saravanan, where
she, although a non-Muslim, was urged to submit to the jurisdiction of the Syariah courts to seek recourse from the break-up of her family, when her husband converted to Islam.
It is troubling to note, and indeed of great concern to all Malaysians, that what is clearly stated in the Federal Constitution, that the Syariah courts shall have jurisdiction only over persons professing the religion of Islam [Schedule 9, List 11 (1)], is now being extended, by the court decision, to include non-Muslims.
The Christian Federation of Malaysia respects the Federal Constitution to be the supreme law of the country [Art 4 (1)], and therefore, it must guarantee the right of all non-Muslim Malaysian citizens to find justice served in the civil courts of the country.
In view of this development, the Christian Federation of Malaysia joins with all other likeminded Malaysians in raising our concern to the government. Decisions like this impact negatively on the social fabric of Malaysia.
We therefore, call on all elected members of Parliament to do everything within their means to defend our Constitution, and to safeguard the right of
non-Muslim citizens to find remedy and justice in the civil courts in matters pertaining to civil rights and liberties.
Bishop Paul Tan Chee Ing, SJ Chairman, The Executive Committee Christian Federation of Malaysia
Dated: 22nd March 2007

MCCBCHS PRESS STATEMENT ON COURT OF APPEAL DECISION ON SARAVANAN v. SUBASHINI

March 28th, 2007
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MAJLIS PERUNDINGAN MALAYSIA AGAMA BUDDHA, KRISTIAN, HINDU, SIKH DAN TAO MALAYSIAN CONSULTATIVE COUNCIL OF BUDDHISM, CHRISTIANITY, HINDUISM, SIKHISM AND TAOISM
Secretariat: Buddhist Maha Vihara, 123 Jalan Berhala, Brickfields, 50470 Kuala Lumpur Fax 03 22739307 Email: mccbchst@yahoo.com
PRESS STATEMENT ON COURT OF APPEAL DECISION ON SARAVANAN v. SUBASHINI
In the wake of the majority decision of the Court of Appeal in the case of Saravanan A/L Thangathony v. Subashini A/P Rajasingam [Rayuan Sivil No. W-02-955-2006] we, the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism, are greatly disappointed that once again, the non-converting non-Muslim wife of a convert to Islam has failed to get relief from our Civil Courts. Hitherto, in the case of Shamala a/p Sathiaseelan she was told by the High Court that it had no jurisdiction to declare as unlawful her young children’s conversion into Islam without her knowledge or consent and was advised to seek the assistance of the Islamic authorities. Then the widow of Everest hero, Sgt. M. Moorthy also failed to get relief from the High Court on the ground of jurisdiction.
Following an uproar from civil society, the Right Honorable Prime Minister had declared that although Article 121(1A) of the Constitution would not be amended, laws will be amended to remedy the situation. Though it has been more than a year since then, there have been no amendments to any law as yet to clarify the jurisdiction of the Courts.
It is our duty to inform the authorities that there is growing discomfort amongst the non Muslim citizens of Malaysia, who form 45% of the population, many of whom feel that the judiciary are failing in their constitutional duty to ensure the equal protection of the law for all Malaysians.
In Subashini’s case, the husband converted to Islam and converted the eldest son, aged 3, to Islam without the wife’s knowledge or consent. The husband then applied to the Syariah Court for custody of the son, again with no notice to the wife.
The wife then presented a petition for divorce and ancillary relief and applied to the High Court for an injunction restraining the husband from (i) converting the children of the marriage to Islam and (ii) commencing or continuing with any proceedings in any Syariah Court with regard to the marriage or the children of the marriage. The High Court initially granted an injunction after hearing only the wife who at that time did not know of the substance of the Husband’s applications in the Syariah courts. This injunction was continued whilst the case was heard in the High Court. After the husband submitted his evidence, and after the High Court heard both parties, it refused to give the injunction. However, the High Court granted an interim injunction to the wife pending the hearing of an appeal to the Court of Appeal, known as an “Erinford Injunction”.
The majority decision of the Court of Appeal dismissed the wife’s appeal and set aside the Erinford Injunction with costs, effectively shutting the door on Subashini’s rights as a mother to prevent the Syariah court making a determination as to her marriage and as to the custody of her children. To add to her problem, the majority have ruled that Subashini, a non-Muslim, must apply to the Syariah Court, instead of applying to the High Court. Of particular concern to us is the statement by YA Dato’ Hasan Lah, JCA that the High Court and the Syariah Court must be regarded as having the same standing in this country. We are also concerned to note that in his grounds of judgment YA Datuk Suriyadi Halim Omar, JCA quoted a verse from the Quran and appeared to be elevating the role and prominence of Islamic law and the Islamic judicial system in Malaysia.
We would respectfully remind members of the Judiciary that the Federal Court, Court of Appeal and the High Courts in Malaya and in Sabah and Sarawak are all civil courts and Judges of those courts take an oath of office to uphold the Federal Constitution, which guarantees all persons, including non Muslims, the fundamental liberty of professing and practising their faiths in peace and harmony.
It is very clear and specific in the State legislative list in the 9th Schedule of the Federal Constitution that the “Syariah Courts … shall have jurisdiction only over persons professing the religion of Islam …”. The learned Judges in the majority appear to note that requirement in their judgments, but with respect appear to contradict themselves by then requiring the non Muslim wife to go to the Syariah courts.
We express our objection to any requirement for non-Muslims to have to go to the Syariah Court for relief as such courts apply Islamic theological law. Religious laws cannot be applied to people who do not profess that religion. The Court of Appeal in this case and civil courts are expanding Article 121(1A) of the Federal Constitution. We are also concerned that Syariah Courts are usurping functions which are not theirs. Consequently, non-Muslims are unable to obtain relief when the Syariah Court makes an order which interferes with their fundamental liberties guaranteed by the Federal Constitution.
The Federal Constitution is the supreme law of Malaysia. Our highest court had declared in the case of Che Omar bin Che Soh v. P.P. (1988) 2 MLJ 55 that Article 3 of the Constitution was never intended to extend the application of Syaria to the sphere of public law.
We object to any interpretation of our Constitution or our laws that deprive any person of his fundamental liberties, and deny access to a non Muslim to the High Court applying the general civil law. We urgently call on the Government to immediately make the necessary legislative amendments to safeguard the rights of all Malaysians and to ensure non Muslims have full and proper access to justice in the civil courts.
Dato’ Chee Peck Kiat President