Lawyers familiar with cases of conversion say the Negri Sembilan
Islamic Affairs Department (JHEAINS) cannot cite the family of the late Lawrence
Selvanathan for contempt of the syariah court for cremating his remains. According to noted syariah lawyer Muhamad
Burok, this is because the family is Christian and they therefore do not fall
under the jurisdiction of the syariah court.
"The jurisdiction of the syariah court, according to the
Administration of the Religion of Islam (Negri Sembilan) Enactment 2003, only
extends to cases where all parties are Muslim."This is the law, but if there is a clause that allows (the
contempt action) then let me know," Muhamad said when
contacted.
Agreeing with him, lawyer M
Kulasegaran said the federal constitution, through the inclusion of clause (1A)
into Article 121, clearly states that Malaysia practices two parallel legal
systems.
The clause states that the high
courts have "no jurisdiction in respect of any matter within the jurisdiction of
the syariah court".
It also states that
the syariah court has jurisdiction only "over persons professing the religion of
Islam". "In view of this, the law does
not apply to non-Muslims, subpoenas don't apply and it is my view that contempt
also does not apply," Kulasegaran said.
This would therefore extend to the syariah court order obtained
by JHEAINS to stop Lawrence's funeral on Sept 22 as well, added Kulasegaran, who
is also DAP's Ipoh Barat MP.
"The family
can look at all this with impunity," said the lawyer, who acted for the late
Everest mountaineer M Moorthy's wife in the controversial body snatching case in
2005.
In that matter, S Kaliammal
(right), Moorthy's widow, lost her final legal
redress in the Federal Court in January this year to obtain a
declaration that her late husband was still a Hindu prior to his death five
years ago and that he be accorded a burial according to Hindu rites.
Agreeing with the position taken by
Kulasegaran, Muhamad, argued that the syariah court order would not hold up as
it was served on non-Muslim parties.
In
cases where Islamic departments find that a deceased person has converted
without the family's knowledge, the department could only try to persuade the
family to allow him or her to be buried according to Islamic rites.
"Syariah lawyers get frustrated as the
court's jurisdiction is narrow, but that is the law. The law does not allow
action (in such matters)," Muhamad said.
However, another syariah lawyer, Zulkifli Che Yong said the
syariah court has jurisdiction in such matters, even though the parties involved
are non-Muslim.
"It depends on the
subject matter. In this case, the subject is a man who is said to have converted
to Islam," he said, adding that the situation may be less clear in the case of
citing the family for contempt.
Political will lacking?
JHEAINS claims that it has a certificate and a video recording
proving that Lawrence, 33, had converted to Islam three days before his death
and had taken the name Zairy Abdullah. The agency had at 12.40am on Sept 22, the day of his funeral,
served the court order on the family stopping them from proceeding with the
funeral, which was to take place at 3pm in Lukut, Port Dickson.
JHEAINS also stopped the family while they
were on the way to the funeral mass; but the deceased's friends took matters
into their own hands and cremated the
body.
On Thursday, the department told Malaysiakini that
it is looking at citing
Lawrence's family for contempt for having refused to comply to the syariah court
order.
In 2009, the government announced that it would amend the Law Reform (Marriage and Divorce) Act 1976, Administration of Islamic Law (Federal Territories) Act 1993 and Islamic Family Law (Federal Territories) Act 1984 to deal with disputes over matters of conversion.
The amendments have yet to go through. According to Kulasegaran , the government had formed a committee headed by Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Koh Tsu Koon, and the matter was then referred to the rulers.
"Nothing has gone through. At the end of the day it's the fault of the government for not addressing this issue, which it feels is politically challenging and sensitive. "But a pragmatic and realistic government will look at the bigger picture and see the emotional stress and fractures in families caused by this... it shows a lack of willpower by the government," Kulasegaran added.
In 2009, the government announced that it would amend the Law Reform (Marriage and Divorce) Act 1976, Administration of Islamic Law (Federal Territories) Act 1993 and Islamic Family Law (Federal Territories) Act 1984 to deal with disputes over matters of conversion.
The amendments have yet to go through. According to Kulasegaran , the government had formed a committee headed by Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Koh Tsu Koon, and the matter was then referred to the rulers.
"Nothing has gone through. At the end of the day it's the fault of the government for not addressing this issue, which it feels is politically challenging and sensitive. "But a pragmatic and realistic government will look at the bigger picture and see the emotional stress and fractures in families caused by this... it shows a lack of willpower by the government," Kulasegaran added.
Source : http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/177187
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