FEATURED POST

Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

Image
Prisoners are dragged from their cells at 4am without warning to be given a lethal injection Vietnam's use of the death penalty has been thrust into the spotlight after a real estate tycoon was on Thursday sentenced to be executed in one of the biggest corruption cases in the country's history. Truong My Lan, a businesswoman who chaired a sprawling company that developed luxury apartments, hotels, offices and shopping malls, was arrested in 2022.

Extremism Spreads Across Indonesian Penal Code

Under Islamic law, or Shariah, the religious police have administered public canings for such things as gambling, prostitution and illicit affairs. But under a new Islamic criminal code that goes into effect this month, the Shariah police will be wielding a new and more potent threat: death by stoning for adulterers.

Members of the Shariah police, standing, reprimanded women in Banda Aceh for wearing clothing they judged to be too tight.

Most of Indonesia still lives up to its reputation for a moderate, easygoing brand of Islam, and Islamist parties suffered heavy losses in this years national elections. But how Aceh went from basic Islamic law to endorsing stoning in a few short years shows how a small, radical minority has successfully pushed its agenda, locally and nationally, by cowing political and religious moderates.

Though extreme, Aceh is not an isolated case. In recent years, as part of a decentralization of power away from the capital, Jakarta, at least 50 local governments have used their new authority to pass Shariah-based regulations regarding conduct and dress, though none have gone as far as Aceh to deal with criminal matters.

Most experts and human rights advocates believe the regulations discriminate against non-Muslim minorities and contravene the country's Constitution, which guarantees freedom of religion. But the government of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono a moderate former general whose Muslim credentials have often been questioned by political opponents has not challenged them. In fact, Mr. Yudhoyono has backed morality-based laws that pleased Muslim conservative allies but angered advocates of human rights.

The president has yet to comment on the stoning provision, leaving it to his aides to quietly criticize it and clearly hoping that the Aceh Parliament will repeal it. Acehs governor has said he will refuse to carry out any stonings, and even supporters acknowledge that the punishment will be extremely hard to apply for practical and theological reasons. Nevertheless, because the governor lacks veto power, stoning could remain on the books.

That would be an embarrassment for Mr. Yudhoyono, who has sought to raise Indonesia's international standing through its status as the worlds third largest democracy and its most populous Muslim nation. If Acehs lawmakers fail to repeal stoning, the central government may be forced into the potentially divisive course of a court challenge to the local application of Shariah, which has gained wide acceptance here.

Just before noon prayers one recent Friday a mandatory session for men the Shariah polices all-female brigade hopped onto a Toyota pickup to begin patrols. Dressed in olive uniforms, the officers hewed to the city center, away from the areas worst hit by the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. They urged stragglers to hurry to the nearest mosque and exhorted the recalcitrant to yield to Gods authority.

"Dear followers of Islam, people of Banda Aceh, blared a loudspeaker on the Toyota, our city has applied Shariah. Its almost praying time. Close all shops, stop all business activities. No more buying and selling." Aceh has long been know as "Mecca's veranda," because Indonesians used to travel here to board ships bound for Islams holiest city on their hajj, or pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam. Acehs self-identity, if rooted in Islam, was always somewhat apart from the rest of Indonesia. Local forces fighting for autonomy, whether from Dutch colonizers or Suhartos three-decade military rule, always demanded the freedom to carry out Shariah.

So as Aceh separatists and the central government forged a peace agreement in the last decade, Aceh won semiautonomy and the right to Shariah. The authorities began putting Shariah into practice in 2001, widening and reinforcing it every few years with legal revisions. The Shariah police, officially known as "wilayatul hisbah," or the vice and virtue patrol, began operating in 2005 with 13 officers and now has 62, including 14 women.

As Acehs provincial Parliament began considering a more comprehensive Islamic criminal code earlier this year, politicians and clerics at first agreed to defer the issue of stoning, which they generally agree is a punishment specified in the Koran for adultery.

But some lawmakers, apparently allied with radical clerics pushed for its inclusion at the last minute, former and current lawmakers said. Afraid of being branded bad Muslims, even lawmakers with reservations endorsed the law, lawmakers said. Six of the seven parties represented in Parliament voted for the law. The holdout the Democratic Party, which is also President Yudhoyonos merely abstained.

"We never openly said that we were opposed to stoning," said Yusrizal Ibrahim, 49, a Democratic Party member who served as a lawmaker until last month. "Stoning is part of Shariah, and by voting 'No, it would have made it look as though we were against Islam."

But even the local members abstention drew a rebuke from a high-ranking party official in Jakarta. "He told us that if there was no other party opposing it, we should have gone with the flow," Mr. Ibrahim said.

He added he believed that "stoning was against human rights." But he said he would have never "dared to say so explicitly in Parliament" for fear of being labeled an "infidel."

Muhamad Nazar, Acehs deputy governor, said he hoped that a newly installed Parliament made up of more moderates would revise the criminal code.

But new lawmakers interviewed said they were reluctant to broach the delicate topic. Adnan Beuransah, 50, of the moderate Aceh Party, now Parliament's dominant party, said the issue was a "time bomb."

"We wont say whether we oppose stoning or not," Mr. Beuransah said. "Well just focus instead on education, health and more important issues."

Indeed, now that stoning has become part of Shariah here, even religious leaders fear that opposing it would raise doubts among their followers.

"We can't tell them to follow Shariah, except this part about stoning," said Faisal Ali, a cleric who is secretary general of Himpunan Ulama Dayah Aceh, an organization representing 672 Islamic schools, and who believed that Aceh was not ready for stoning yet. "If the people feel that we are not supporting Shariah, they would feel that we are not part of them anymore. That would be an even greater loss because then they would'nt listen to us anymore."

People in Acehs rural areas were said to be Shariahs staunchest supporters, though even most people interviewed here in the provincial capital said they backed the stoning of adulterers.

"If people are caught, they should be given a warning the 1st time," said Fati Ibrahim, 43, a mother of 4 who was buying dustpans at a large store here. "But if theyre caught a 2nd or 3rd time, they should be stoned. "Otherwise, theyll give Aceh a bad image. They'll embarrass us outside Aceh, that we're not practicing Islam as it should be."

Source: New York Times, Oct. 28, 2009; Photo: Woman publicly caned in Indonesia.



Video of man and woman publicly caned for extra-marital relationship (Warning: graphic content)

Most Viewed (Last 7 Days)

Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

Japan | Death-row inmates' lawsuit targeting same-day notifications of executions dismissed

Texas | State district judge recommends overturning Melissa Lucio’s death sentence

Iran | Probable Child Offender and Child Bride, Husband Executed for Drug Charges

U.S. Supreme Court to hear Arizona death penalty case that could redefine historic precedent

Bill Moves Forward to Prevent Use of Nitrogen Gas Asphyxiation in Louisiana Executions

Iraq postpones vote on bill including death penalty for same-sex acts