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I thought the Talibans were in town

August 29th, 2009 Tunku Aziz No comments

WHEN I read that Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno was fined five thousand ringgit and ordered to receive six strokes of the rotan for drinking beer in a hotel bar, I thought the Talibans were in town.

I am not about to dispute the legitimacy of the sentence that had been imposed by the Syariah Court on Kartika. I will even go along with the argument that “the law is the law”, and Kartika herself, mind you, was the first to admit that she was wrong to drink alcohol as a Muslim.

The point I want to make in this case is that, in all the circumstances, justice should have been tempered with mercy because what is legal is not always moral or ethical. After all, Allah whom we Muslims worship is a compassionate and merciful God, and human beings administering the laws of God must never invoke His name in vain for it is a grievous sin.

From all accounts, Kartika was repentant and showed every sign of being sincerely remorseful. She did not plead for leniency, and offered no excuses for her unislamic behaviour. If anything, she begged the court in all humility, in a gesture that admitted of complete personal responsibility for her actions, that she be caned in public, at the first opportunity. In other words, this principled, gutsy lady accepted her punishment truly like a man. The lady was not for turning, with apologies to Margaret Thatcher. No theatrical farce or histrionics for Kartika, the young mother of two who displayed for all to see a streak of her extraordinary determination to face the music and get on with her life.

What a great loss of opportunity to show the world that Islam as a religion that is practised in Malaysia is moderate, compassionate and just. Instead, the Islamic authorities, by their single minded obsession with what I can only describe as the principle of absolutism that is thought to be capable of being applied to all situations, regardless, have succeeded in denigrating the true achievements, virtues and values of this great religion. They have done an enormous disservice to Islam, Malaysia and themselves.

Caning as a form of punishment is considered, and rightly so, barbaric, and no one has any right to inflict this indignity upon a fellow human. The entire civilised world totally rejects it, and for us to continue to adopt this practice is to be deliberately obtuse because Malaysia as an economic and political entity does not operate in isolation. Our religious leaders obviously haven’t much of a clue about the damage they can do to their country because Islam is our State religion according to the constitution, and we are under international scrutiny continually. Tun Dr. Mahathir felt constrained to comment that it mattered not what the world thought of us in relation to the corporal punishment being meted out to Kartika. It is his view of the world around us, but even he must know that our ability to be internationally competitive depends on how foreigners perceive us. Human rights have come into their own and have become part of the larger negotiating weapon in global trade. Trade and human rights are inter-linked whether we relish the idea or not.

Our proud boast of being a progressive Muslim country practising a moderate form of Islam rings terribly hollow when in practice we are not much different from what some our fellow believers do in Iran or Pakistan. What right have we to be seated at the top table with the civilised nations of the world?

Islam today is under severe threat of marginalisation because Muslims have committed acts of cruelty and inhumanity across the globe in the name of their religion, to serve their own ends. We know what the score is and yet persist in behaviour that is no longer acceptable to the overwhelming majority of enlightened people everywhere.

The news of this affront to human dignity about to be visited on a helpless woman has gripped the imagination of the world, and after watching the BBC, Al Jazeera and CNN, I was not surprised to see the next day the story splashed on the front page of every major newspaper from New York to London. This one single careless act by the Syariah authorities has undone all the good work of Tun Abdullah Badawi on Civilisational Islam that he promoted so assiduously in many international forums while he was prime minister.

Muslim authorities in Malaysia owe it not just to themselves but the larger Malaysian community to consider carefully the possible negative repercussions before embarking on actions that can have more than purely religious implications.

(By TUNKU ABDUL AZIZ/MySinchew)

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The art of blaming thy neighbours

August 22nd, 2009 Tunku Aziz No comments

MALAYSIA IS blessed in that there is a law for every situation; you name it and we have it all. Tragically, the mountains of statutes have done nothing more than to earn for us an international reputation of being an overregulated and an under enforced country, with the usual, predictable consequences.

In short, we have already become a first rate country run, generally speaking, by a third rate one race-dominated public service and who have, by their general attitude to their work, made it impossible for Malaysia to be taken seriously. We have, at the same time become a reactive, finger pointing society whenever the inevitable happens. Both on a personal as well as institutional level we have developed a propensity for “blame thy neighbour” into a fine art form.

The tragedy is that we Malays have made a virtue of “If it be the will of God” while forgetting, somewhat disingenuously, that in His infinite wisdom, “God helps those who help themselves.” It is not unlike some Malays practising polygamy and claiming their rights under Islam while ignoring studiously the very strict injunctions and responsibility that their religion demands of such an undertaking.

I am also reminded of Malays enriching themselves by corrupt means and claiming that it is “redzeki yang diberi oleh Tuhan” or loosely translated “God’s bountiful blessings” and who are they, they claim or we, for that matter, to question His wisdom and beneficence? What chance do we ordinary corruption-despising mortals have against those who believe quite sincerely that God is really on their side?

Yielding to what we want to believe to be “the inevitable” comes easily to us Malays because it takes responsibility out of our hands, and as a people, we are predisposed to shift responsibility and apportion blame to others. We find great emotional and psychological comfort that when something goes wrong; we can attribute it all to an act of God, or God’s will. We are from birth intoned to accept the inevitable even though we, through our criminal negligence, inefficiency or plain corrupt practice, allow what is largely preventable.

It is a fact that the vast majority of corruption cases involve Malays in government service and those who contribute to the corruption statistics are generally drawn from the lower ranks of the public service, the underpaid foot soldiers, and never the top dogs. The Malaysian Anti Corruption Commission, our custodian of all things good and wholesome in public behaviour may want, when they are tired of harassing the Pakatan Rakyat state assemblymen, to tell the world why Federal ministers have generally been left in peace to feather their own nests? And those reports made by the public against them?

To be fair to my own people, we Malays are not congenitally morally or ethically deficient. It would be wrong to suggest that we invented corruption. The blame must be placed squarely on the improper implementation of the New Economic Policy, a real curse, to the poor ordinary Malays. They find themselves suddenly wielding power over their fellow citizens, and that puts an enormous temptation in their way. Malays like others with power to abuse as they like can resist most things, but not temptation. They also know that they operate in a corruption friendly environment, and can get away literally with murder.

In the 52 years under the same government, no powerful minister or top bureaucrat for that matter, however corrupt, has ever been put behind bars. This led the Dr. Mahathir when he was prime minister to suggest somewhat cynically as is his trademark that Malaysian ministers were clean. Using his logic we must have the cleanest government in the world. We believe him at our peril. The next TI Corruption Perceptions Index will be an interesting barometer of the degree of corruption of Najib and his merry band. Corruption is not just about money changing hands. Using a government helicopter for party work is abuse of power. That in plain language is bending the rules. Don’t say you have not been warned. (By TUNKU ABDL AZIZ/MySinchew)

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Kaji semula desakan melarang penggunaan perkataan Allah sebelum mahkamah membuat keputusan

March 11th, 2009 Tunku Aziz No comments

DAP meminta Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi supaya mengkaji semula keputusanya mendesak semua kerajaan negeri mewartakan larangan penggunaan perkataan “Allah” dalam mana-mana penerbitan bukan Islam.

Adalah lebih baik jika Menteri itu menunggu keputusan Mahkamah Tinggi berhubung perkara itu sebelum membuat sebarang tindakan yang akan hanya mengeruhkan lagi hubungan harmoni rakyat Malaysia.
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