Hadi Awang says off with
their hands
Eastern state of Kelantan to begin debate on implementation of hudud
If
events play out as planned, tomorrow Malaysia’s fundamentalist Parti Islam
se-Malaysia appears certain to set in motion events that have the potential to
wreck the opposition coalition that for the first time in 45 years won more
votes in the 2013 general election than the ruling Barisan Nasional.
PAS expects to introduce legislation in the Kelantan state Assembly to
ultimately enable implementation of hudud, the 7th-Century sharia law that
provides penalties such as amputation of limbs for theft and stoning to death
for adultery. That would pave the way to engineer a parliamentary vote to amend
the federal constitution to extend it to the nation, heretofore regarded in
western capitals as a moderate Muslim-dominated country at peace with its
ethnic minorities. The measure, set for debate, appears certain to pass.
It has been endorsed by Muhamad V, the Kelantan sultan.
The tenuous opposition coalition includes the Chinese-dominated
Democratic Action Party as well as now-jailed opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s
Parti Keadilan Rakyat, or People’s Justice Party, which is comprised mostly of
relatively liberal urban Malays. To them, PAS’s ambition to implement a law
most regard as barbaric is simply unacceptable. Although PAS leaders have
repeatedly said the Islamic criminal penalty package would not be applied to
those of other ethnic backgrounds, opposition leaders believe it is inevitable
that it would be extended to cover all.
From the time Anwar put together the Pakatan Rakyat coalition prior to
the 2008 election, it has been shaky, composed of groups going in different
directions – a Chinese party that wants nothing to do with religious law and
considers pork a staple, a fundamentalist Islamic party that considers eating
pork a pathway to hell, and a third party, Anwar’s that appears to stand
for very little except seeking national power.
It appears UMNO will support the measure and that it will pass. Once
it passes, Kelantan officials would then have to engineer the introduction of a
bill to amend the federal constitution to allow for the practice. What
happens then is unclear.
Lim Kit Siang, the party leader of the DAP, accused UMNO of “trying
their utmost in the past seven years to use the bait of “UG” (unity government
between UMNO and PAS) and in the past year the additional bait of ‘hudud
implementation in Kelantan’ to achieve their objective to divide, destabilize
and destroy the most formidable coalition challenge ever to be faced by (the
Barisan Nasional).
With
Anwar in prison on charges of sodomy, the Pakatan Rakyat coalition is basically
leaderless and has been unable to thwart PAS’s intentions in the rural,
impoverished east coast state. The biggest concern is that other states in the
ethnic Malay-dominated tier across the top of the country would follow Kelantan
with their own measures despite the fact that they are controlled by UMNO.
That includes the states of Terengannu, Perak, Perlis and Kedah.
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