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Malaysia man flogged in mosque for crime of gender mixing

The Friday's flogging was the first instance of a Sharia court-ordered whipping taking place outside of a court setting in Malaysia.

AFP
Kuala Terengganu, Malaysia
Sat, December 28, 2024 Published on Dec. 28, 2024 Published on 2024-12-28T11:23:17+07:00

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Malaysia man flogged in mosque for crime of gender mixing A man walks past Al-Muktafi Billah Shah mosque in Kuala Terengganu, Malaysia on Dec. 27, 2024. A man was flogged inside a Malaysia mosque on Dec. 27 after being convicted of an Islamic offense for spending time alone with a woman who was neither his wife or relative, state news said. (AFP/Arif Kartono)

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man was flogged inside a Malaysia mosque on Friday after being convicted of an Islamic offense for spending time alone with a woman who was neither his wife or relative, state news said.

The 42-year-old construction worker was given six lashes in Malaysia's conservative state of Terengganu after being convicted by a Sharia court, the official Bernama news agency said.

It was the first instance of a Sharia court-ordered whipping taking place outside of a court setting in Malaysia according to the agency.

An AFP journalist saw the man delivered to the mosque in a prison van after Friday prayers, wearing an orange inmate's jumpsuit as he entered before a hushed crowd.

The caning in punishment for the Islamic crime known as khalwat took place inside the mosque after an audience of around 90 people was admitted.

Earlier this week the Malaysian Bar association of lawyers said it had "profound concern" over the decision to flog the man.

"Such punishments strip individuals of their dignity," a statement said.

But spectator Mohd Sabri Muhammad said he hoped the it would deter those "tempted to commit immoral acts".

"Valentine's Day, New Year's, there are many opportunities for young people to engage in inappropriate behavior," the 37-year-old told AFP.

Multi-ethnic Malaysia has a dual-track legal system, with Islamic courts handling some matters for Muslim citizens.

Caning typically takes place on a fully-clothed person and critics say it aims to humiliate as well as physically punish the recipient.

Sharia court-ordered caning is rare but not uncommon in Malaysia. Two women convicted of violating religious laws by having sexual relations were caned in front of more than 100 spectators in an Islamic court in 2018.

The Human Rights Commission of Malaysia said last week that "punishments that inflict physical violence and public humiliation have no place in a modern justice system".

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