Friday, April 9, 2010

In Indonesia – Death by Stoning for adultery





Secular Indonesia outraged over Aceh mob justice







Last year the North Sumatran provincial government passed the Qanun Jinayat, a bill allowing adulterers and other religious offenders to be put to death by stoning.

Indonesia on Friday promised a full investigation into the public humiliation, mob beating and possible caning under Islamic law of two people suspected of having an adulterous tryst. The offences allegedly took place Wednesday after a 36-year-old teacher and a 28-year-old housewife were accused of having extramarital sex in Aceh province, where religious police enforce sharia or Islamic regulations. They were dragged from thewoman's home by an angry mob, paraded naked through their village, tied to a post and beaten almost to death, and now face nine lashes each in public, police said.

It is the latest incident to expose the conflict between local sharia provisions and rights enshrined in the secular constitution of the world's most populous Muslim-majority country. "This is a barbarous crime and obviously against our rule of law," an official at the justice and human rights ministry said. "We will order police to launch an immediate probe and to take firm and concrete action against the perpetrators."

Nearly 90 percent of Indonesia's 234 million people are Muslims, but the vast majority practise a moderate form of the religion. National human rights commission chairman Ifdhal Kasim urged President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to clarify that rights guaranteed under the constitution take supremacy over local regulations, including religious ones.

Aceh, one of the most deeply Islamic areas of the vast archipelago, adopted partial sharia law in 2001 as part of an autonomy package aimed at quelling separatist sentiment.

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