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Thursday, 27 August 2009

One lash... and there'll be no turning back

by Tay Tian Yan/translated by Dominic Loh

A little oversight, and Malaysia's image will nosedive to the same levels of Sudan, or Afghanistan, Pakistan or Iran.

Not too long ago, Sudanese woman Lubna al-Hussein was sentenced by the court to 40 lashes for wearing pants, much to the shock and ridicule of the entire world.

All of a sudden, Sudan was treated free propaganda on global media, and the country was seen on the same ground as autocracy, backwardness, inhumanity and anti-feminism.

Who would want to visit or invest in a country like this?

Malaysian woman Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno was sentenced to six strokes of rotan by the syariah court in Pahang for beer drinking.

ImageThanks to publication taboo, the incident has not been given enough weight by local media; but the news has been carried far and wide by international players such as CNN, BBC, The Associated Press, Reuters, The Wall Street Journal, New York Times, as well as their counterparts in Asia.

Indeed, drinking is haram, unlike wearing pants, but to international media, they are all thrown into the same category.

And we all know they don't view the case favourably.

Year after year, Tourism Malaysia has been spending enormous amounts of money to promote "Malaysia, Truly Asia." However, it takes a lot of effort to really put the country on global media.

A verdict by the syariah court in Pahang has surpassed 10 years of effort by Tourism Malaysia in getting the country exposed in international media.

Malaysia has over and again emphasised that it is practising moderate Islam, and under the auspices of "moderation," a person infringing upon religious taboos should be served with exhortation or light penalties such as small-amount fines.

Even moderate and open-minded Muslims feel the so-called taboos are a relationship between the believer and God. If punishment must be served, it should be God who passes down the verdict, not anyone else.

If Kartika is eventually caned, the country's image will invariably come under the invisible punishment of the international community.

The country will be seen as one that flogs a woman on religious grounds.

If this were to take place, the government will have problem getting international recognition no matter how hard it sells its "open and moderate" image.

Some in the government are indeed aware of the seriousness of this issue, hence the last-minute halt to the caning and Najib's advice that Kartika should appeal.

That said, conservative religious clerics and outfits keep exerting pressure, and will not call it a day until and unless a stroke has landed on Kartika's body.

But that stroke will send the Islamisation a big stride ahead.

If a precedent is set, any punishment in the name of religion in future will be justified, including punishments handed down on women.

Certain enough, with that one lash, there'll be no turning back for Malaysia. (By TAY TIAN YAN/Translated by DOMINIC LOH/Sin Chew Daily)

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