JAKARTA, Indonesia — Human  Rights Watch urged Indonesia  on Wednesday to overturn Shariah laws in the conservative province of  Aceh, saying the application of the legal code of Islam has resulted in  widespread rights abuses.        
The New York-based group said in a report  that laws policing morality had resulted  in violence and sexual abuse  by the province’s Shariah police, known as the Wilayatul Hisbah, and by  vigilante members of the public.        
The laws run against “Indonesia’s own national laws and the  constitution” and place Indonesia “in violation of its international  human rights obligations, in particular the right to free expression,  religious freedom, free association and privacy,” said Elaine Pearson,  the deputy  director of Human Rights Watch in Asia.        
In particular, the group took issue with laws banning “khalwat,” or  association between single or unrelated members of the opposite sex, as  well as strict Islamic dress codes.        
Enforcement of the khalwat law frequently results in detention of up to  24 hours in which men and women found together are often forced to marry  and women are compelled to undergo invasive virginity tests, the report  said. More than 800 people, including children, were detained last year  under the khalwat law, which also carries punishments of caning and  fines.        
In one case this year, two members of the Wilayatul Hisbah were  convicted in the rape of a 19-year-old woman who was arrested while  riding on a motorbike with her boyfriend on a secluded road.        
The group also said that more than 2,600 people were stopped last year  under a law prohibiting un-Islamic dress. Although the wording of the  law applies to both men and women, in practice it overwhelmingly singles  out women, as well as the poor, the report said.        
Shariah law in Aceh has also caused a rise in brutal vigilante justice  by the public, with authorities routinely turning a blind eye to mob  violence, it said.        
Human Rights Watch called on the governor of Aceh, Irwandi Yusuf, to  press the legislature to repeal the laws and urged the central  government to file an appeal in Indonesia’s Supreme Court on the grounds  that they violate the country’s nonsectarian constitution. Mr. Yusuf  and his deputy, Muhammad Nazar, could not be reached for comment.         
Shariah laws began to be applied in Aceh, a staunchly Islamic province,  in 2001 as part of government attempts to end three decades of conflict  between Jakarta and the separatist Free Aceh Movement. It is the only  region of Indonesia to officially embrace Shariah, although some  districts have implemented Islamic-inspired ordinances.        
A stricter Shariah code that includes death by stoning for adulterers  was passed by legislators last year but the governor has refused to sign  it.        
Syafruddin, a deputy chief of Aceh’s Wilayatul Hisbah, dismissed the  Human Rights Watch report’s allegations of widespread abuse as  inaccurate.        
“In the law we need to talk about evidence. Who did it? What’s their  name? When did the cases happen?” he said. “They don’t have anything  concrete.”        
Allegations that officers discriminated against women when enforcing  Islamic dress codes were also wrong, he argued.
source: NYT 
Няма коментари:
Публикуване на коментар
Ас-саламу алейкум! Мир на всички!
Преди да коментирате, ви моля да помислите добре върху това, което искате да кажете и за начина, по който ще го изречете. Аз няма да толерирам фитната и обидни изказвания по адрес на Аллах и Исляма. Ако имате въпроси, кажете или попитайте по начин, по който искате и на вас да ви се говори :D
Ако искате да ми кажете нещо лично, персонално до мен, ползвайте електронната ми поща (и-мейл).