Teo Cheng Wee (The Straits Times), The Asia News Network | Thu, 02/16/2012 9:49 AM
tribunnews.comDays
after deporting a Saudi
journalist accused of insulting Islam,
Malaysia
continued to attract criticism for caving in to Saudi
government pressure in what some say is a bid to burnish its own Muslim
credentials.
Among
those to chime in is former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad. He said Malaysia
should have weighed the consequences before sending Hamza Kashgari back to Saudi
Arabia to a possible death sentence.
"If
it may cause the loss of life, we have to see the justification," Mahathir
said this week.
Kashgari,
a 23-year-old newspaper columnist, had fled Saudi
Arabia after he was accused of insulting Prophet Muhammad through his Twitter
posts. He was detained in Malaysia
on Thursday last week, at the request of Saudi
Arabia, while on his way to New Zealand to seek asylum.
He
was sent back to Saudi
Arabia on Sunday, despite objections from human rights groups, who fear he will
face persecution and the death sentence upon his return.
Indeed,
the speed with which Kashgari was extradited, despite the lack of an
extradition treaty between the two countries, was likely due to pressure from Saudi
Arabia, said political analyst Johan Saravanamuttu. A Saudi
Facebook page demanding his execution has received tens of thousands of
members.
"Malaysia
has good ties with Arab states in the Middle East, including Saudi
Arabia. As a Muslim-majority state itself, it would be difficult - and seem
insensitive - for Malaysia
not to repatriate this person," he said.
The
government was likely also eyeing its Malay-Muslim base, with the general
election widely expected to take place soon, said political analyst Joseph
Liow, an expert on regional Muslim issues.
"In
this case, I believe the imperative was to secure this base by not coming
across as condoning a crime as serious as blasphemy against the Prophet,"
Liow said. "Even the opposition would not risk too vocal condemnation of
this action, especially those banking on their religious credentials."
A Saudi
committee of top clerics has branded Kashgari an "infidel" and wants
him tried in an Islamic
court.
Malaysia's
government-appointed Human Rights Commission (Suhakam) said it was
"greatly disappointed with the hasty deportation" of Kashgari.
Prior
to the extradition, Suhakam said, it had written to Home Minister Hishammuddin
Hussein to consider this case according to human rights principles - that a
person facing persecution in his country should not be returned to that country.
"Kashgari's
deportation will have a severe negative impact on the country, as it violates
international human rights laws," Suhakam vice-chairman Khaw Tee Lake
said.
Prominent
local non-governmental organisation Sisters In Islam
said the government has failed to live up to its talk of being a moderate
Muslim country.
"Do
we not have any autonomy in deciding our own policies, or do we, as
Hishammuddin implies, adhere to the whims of countries we perceive as more
powerful?" it said in a statement.
Kashgari
has been under the Saudi
Home Ministry's custody since returning home on Sunday and has not had access
to a lawyer appointed by his family, said Afiq Noor, a Malaysian
lawyer who represented the Saudi
journalist here.
Afiq
and a group of lawyers have filed an application with Malaysian
courts to declare the detention of Kashgari unlawful. It will be heard next
Wednesday at the High Court here.
While
he holds little hope of Kashgari being brought back to Malaysian
courts, he said he still wants a symbolic court declaration.
"We
want to do this so that if such an incident happens again, it sets a precedent,
and the government will not be able to do this next time," he said.