Sunday, December 20, 2009

Sharia on the rise: Aceh's Islamic police out in force, aim for complete control

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An Islamic sharia policeman (R) gives advice to Acehnese girls during a street inspection in Banda Aceh, December 1, 2009. Women may soon be banned [January 1, 2010] from wearing tight trousers in parts of an Indonesian province that practices strict Islamic law, and offenders could see their attire cut up.

Look at the girl in the pink - it is like do you mean this stupid headscarf isn't enough! Whereas the one in the white - wants to beg for forgiveness even before she knows what she has done wrong - exactly the way they like their women in the Islamic world - docile and obedient - only with special permission - and after careful consideration - can they act otherwise.

    “But we are not like the Taliban,” [Islamic policeman] said, explaining that stoning is the last resort.

When referring to Aceh's new stoning law - the new clause was added - after reassuring the world in 2004 - when they first introduced Islamic law - that they would not introduce stoning - well they have - the new amendment also means that Muslim as well as non-Muslims will be held to Islamic law.

    ...a boy dressed in Bermuda shorts. Mr Abdullah [Shari'a cop], his arms behind his back, turned his stony gaze towards him. “Do you think you are a good Muslim?” he asked. “Do you know the meaning of a good Muslim?”

    The boy nodded and bowed his head. “Then why are you dressed like a Kafir?” Mr Abdullah roared.


Article by Dubai's The National - can't help getting the feeling that they are somehow in support of this kind of enforced Islamization. Look at Dubai - at least 3 British women - that we know of have spend up to 6 months in jail for adultery there - one of whom was imprisoned for being unaccompanied with her boss - she travelled up from South Africa to be a diving instructor in the Gulf !! Dubai's The National also penned an article featuring British Muslim leaders - who want to see the Shari'a courts they are allowed to operate - be given more recognition in British law - they want Shari'a law.



BANDA ACEH, INDONESIA // The girls are outmanoeuvered. Out of nowhere, a group of policewomen in olive-green uniforms, swoop in and flag down their motorcycle.

“Where are you going?” one asks, inspecting their identity cards.

“To the university,” the girls reply demurely.

“Dressed like that?” she thunders. “That’s not how a Muslim should dress. If you wear clothes like that, you will burn in hell!”

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There is a deer-in-the-headlights moment. The girls, both teenagers, freeze in shamefaced silence.

Both of them are wearing headscarves and dressed in nothing skimpy. But they still flout Aceh’s dress code: both are wearing skin-tight, hip-hugging jeans, a big taboo in the eyes of Aceh’s Sharia police.

Since 2005, the police have patrolled the streets of Aceh, the northernmost province of the Indonesian archipelago, to chase down boys and girls dressed inappropriately, to chide men for cavorting with unrelated women in public and arrest those who drink alcohol or gamble.

But the province has recently stepped up its efforts to enshrine Islamic morality and, in September, the provincial government passed a controversial law which mandates that Muslims caught committing adultery should be stoned to death. The law goes further to outlaw homosexuality and refuses to deem marital rape a crime.

The law, which sparked outrage from human rights groups, provoked comparisons with countries such as Somalia and Nigeria.

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Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, has been well-known for its more moderate brand of Islam. Islamist parties were trounced in this year’s national elections, suggesting that a majority of Indonesians do not support a hard-lined interpretation of Islam.

However, in recent years, as part of a decentralisation of power away from the capital, more than half of Indonesia’s provinces have passed Sharia-based laws regarding conduct and dress, but none have gone as far as Aceh.

Whether stoning will be enforced in the province, which has only recently emerged from a decades long civil conflict, is questionable. While most parliamentarians voted in favour of the law there is no agreement on the actual implementation of it.

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“The truth can only be told in the shadows,” said Mr Kamaruddin Abu Bakar, the deputy head of Party Aceh, a political party set up by former rebels. “This is a very delicate subject.” He said stoning was impractical to implement, but was non-committal about repealing the law. Even when it comes to canings for those caught in indecent dress, there is some room for concessions.

At the moment, violators are only offered Islamic “guidance”. In some instances, they are summoned to Aceh’s Grand Mosque for a public chastisement.

However, from January 1, women in the district of West Aceh will be banned from wearing trousers.

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Women caught in breach will have their trousers torn up and they will be forced to wear “loose fitting” attire. Ramli Mansur, the district chief of West Aceh, has already placed an order for 14,000 long skirts, and sent a stern edict to schools and colleges warning against violating the law.

“This is a very primitive way of thinking,” said Liani, a 23-year-old university student in Banda Aceh. “To wear or not wear jeans or jilbab is a decision that should come from the heart. Heaven and hell are not geographical places.”

But Aceh’s Dinas Syariat Islam, or provincial Sharia office, says the limited sartorial freedoms are for women’s own good.

“It will reduce crime,” said Ayub Ahmad, the secretary of Dinas Syariat Islam, who went on to explain: “Bill Clinton decided to have an affair with Monica Lewinsky only after he saw her in seductive dresses.”

"There is no clash between modernity and Islam," said Marzuki Abdullah, a stout man with a bottlebrush moustache who is the commander of the 1,500-strong Sharia police force. “Religion is the primary need of Acehnese people.”

“But we are not like the Taliban,” he said, explaining that stoning is the last resort.

It is not just women, men too must adhere to the dress code.

Recently, male and female officers from the Sharia policefanned out on both sides of a busy arterial road leading up to Banda Aceh’s airport. Mr Abdullah, who trailed the convoy in his SUV, stood nearby, inspecting his troops from a distance.

A while later, they hauled over a boy dressed in Bermuda shorts. Mr Abdullah, his arms behind his back, turned his stony gaze towards him. “Do you think you are a good Muslim?” he asked. “Do you know the meaning of a good Muslim?”

The boy nodded and bowed his head. “Then why are you dressed like a Kafir?” Mr Abdullah roared.

There was no answer.

The boy was let off after another mild chiding by a supervising officer. “We won’t be lenient with you next time,” Mr Abdullah warned.

The National


1 comments:

Anonymous said...

in the UK, if a girl was wearing innapropriate clothing they would also be stopped by the police...

the only difference:

in the UK people think its ok to be half naked outside... so someone would have to be topless/naked... they would actually get fined or arrested bcos UK public dont agree with nudity.

In muslim countries, people are more modestly dressed and so wearing tight clothing is not liked by the public or acceptable.
the police gain nothing, they just do their job... but the girls gain respect in their community if they are viewed as people and not bodies on display for men.

law is dependant on the community it works in.