Showing posts with label Seksyen 66 EJSNS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seksyen 66 EJSNS. Show all posts

17 November 2014

MAKNYAH DALAM BIBLE?

Islam sangat menentang keras lelaki yang berpakaian seperti wanita; dan wanita yang berpakaian seperti lelaki; mereka termasuk golongan yang dilaknat Allah!
Salam 2 all.

Sebenarnya pendirian tegas Islam dalam isu maknyah, bapuk dan pondan berpakaian seperti perempuan turut dikongsi didalam Bibel, yang menyatakan dengan jelas:

Deuteronomy 22:5 - A woman must not wear men's clothing, nor a man wear women's clothing, for the Lord of God detest anyone who does this" (New International Version Bible page 296).

Ayat ini telah diterjemahkan seperti berikut:

Ulangan 22:5 - Orang perempuan tak boleh berpakaian seperti laki-laki dan orang laki-laki tidak boleh berpakaian seperti perempuan, sebab orang yang berbuat begitu dibenci Tuhan..." (Al-kitab mukasurat 267).

Pendirian Islam dalam isu maknyah, bapuk atau pondan, atau lelaki berpakaian perempuan atau perempuan berpakaian lelaki sangat jelas. Mereka termasuk golongan yang dilaknat Allah.

Sabda Rasulullah SAW : عن ابن عباس رضي الله عنهما قال : لعن النبي صلى الله عليه وسلم المخنثين من الرجال ، المترجلات من النساء Maksudnya : Daripada Ibn Anas r.a berkata Rasulullah SAW melaknat mereka yang menyerupai wanita daripada kalangan lelaki dan mereka yang menyerupai lelaki daripada kalangan wanita (HR Al-Bukhari).

Seksyen 66 Enakmen Jenayah Syariah Negeri Sembilan sekadar menterjemahkan pendirian Islam itu dengan suatu peruntukkan iaitu:

Mana-mana orang lelaki yang memakai pakaian perempuan atau berlagak seperti perempuan di mana-mana tempat awam adalah melakukan satu kesalahan dan hendaklah apabila disabitkan dikenakan hukuman denda tidak melebihi satu ribu ringgit atau penjara selama tempoh tidak melebihi enam bulan atau kedua-duanya".

Dan pendirian tegas Islam ini bersesuaian dengan pendirian Pertubuhan Kesihatan Sedunia yang jelas mengklasifikasikan kes maknyah, bapuk atau pondan berpakaian seperti perempuan ini sebagai satu penyakit mental, sebagaimana yang dinyatakan seperti berikut:

"Klasifikasi penyakit World Health Organisation (WHO) yang disebut sebagai ICD (International Classification of Diseases) yang kini dalam versi ICD-10. ICD ini merupakan rujukan asas diagnostik untuk epidemiologi, pengurusan kesihatan dan juga bagi tujuan klinikal.

Menurut ICD-10, lelaki yang berpakaian perempuan diklasifikasikan di bawah F64. Ia termasuk F64.0 – Transsexualism dan F64.1 – Dual-role transvestism … dalam bahasa mudahnya kita sebut MAKNYAH atau PONDAN.

Di bawah klasifikasi F64, F65 dan F66, terdapat pelbagai jenis penyakit seksual seperti ini yang diklasifikasikan sebagai penyakit-penyakit mental" (sumber daripada www.akarimomar.wordpress.com). 
 
Apa yang saya musykilkan ialah, kenapa pihak gereja dan para pendakyah kristian kelihatan membisu dalam isu keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan didalam kes Juzaili dll membabitkan pembatalan Seksyen 66 EJSNS kononnya atas alasan Juzaili dan rakan-rakanya mempunyai hak asasi untuk memakai pakaian seperti perempuan walaupun hakikatnya mereka lelaki!

Bukankah tindakan Juzaili memakai pakaian perempuan itu melanggar Bibel yang menjadi pegangan penganut kristian juga? Penganut kristian yang mengikut Bibel sepatutnya bersama dengan umat Islam dalam menentang kemungkaran ini!

Saya mohon pencerahan daripada penganut kristian mengenai Deuteronomy 22:5 ini!

Apa pun saya teringat ayat Al-Quran yang memberi peringatan kepada kita mengenai kaum yang menjadikan rahib dan pendeta mereka sebagai penyembahan! Apakah yang dimaksudkan 'mempertuhankan" rahib & pendeta ini'?

At-Taubah: Dan mereka menjadikan rahib-rahib dan pendita mereka sebagai tuhan selain Allah".

Apabila disanggah oleh seorang penganut kristian bernama Adi bin Hatim (yang kemdiannya memeluk Islam radhiyallah hu'anhu) bahawa penganut kristian tidak menjadikan pendeta dan rahib mereka sebagai tuhan, lalu Rasulullah saw bersabda;

"Bukankah mereka mengharamkan apa yang Allah halalkan kemudian kalian ikut mengharamkannya; dan mereka menghalalkan apa yang Allah haramkan kemudian kalian ikut menghalalkannya?". Lalu jawab Adi Bin Hatim, "Ya benar". Lalu Rasulullah saw bersabda, "Itulah bentuk peribadatan (penyembahan) kepada mereka (para rahib dan pendita)" (hadis riwayat Ahmad & Tirmidhi).

Allah mengharamkan lelaki berpakaian perempuan, Nabi turut mengharamkan lelaki berpakain perempuan; dan kita umat Islam turut mengharamkannya!

Bibel mengharamkan lelaki berpakain perempuan, jadi penganut agama kristian wajib sama menyokong umat Islam mengharamkan apa yang bibel mereka haramkan!  

Semoga Allah menjauhkan kita daripada fitnah akhir zaman ini, ameen!!!

Wallahua'lam dan wassalam.

Adios amigos, grasias senor!

Zulkifli Bin Noordin
Isnin
25 Muharram 1436
17 November 2014
NOVEMBER 17 — Somewhere along the line, the civil courts would have to stop niggling away at the syariah courts. So does the civil common law at the Islamic law. These courts and laws are not meant to engage in a power struggle against each other; they are meant to complement each other.
The constitutional provision is clear. Article 121(1A) provides for a dual legal system, wherein the civil or secular law goes hand in hand with the Islamic law. The implication of which is that secular law cannot be used to modify syariah law — although the former is within the federal list, while the latter the state list — neither could the civil courts intervene in matters that fall within the jurisdiction of the syariah courts. To do so would be an affront to the very structure of our legal system. These are basics, of which even first-year law students are expected to know, what more judges of the Court of Appeal.
Alleged unconstitutionalities
Notwithstanding Article 121(1A), however, Article 4(1) of the Federal Constitution on the other hand provides that the constitution is supreme, and as such any law which is inconsistent with its provisions would very much be opened for challenge. The courts, therefore, have the power to declare any law unconstitutional to the extent of its inconsistency with the constitution. And this, the Court of Appeal verily did, in its recent judgment on transgender and cross-dressing, wherein the three panel judges who sat and heard Muhamad Juzaili bin Mohd Khamis & 2 Ors v State Government of Negri Sembilan & 4 Ors unanimously held that section 66 of the Syariah Criminal Enactment 1992 (Negeri Sembilan) criminalising cross-dressing of any male person wearing a woman’s attire in public, as void for supposedly being inconsistent with Articles 5(1), 8(1), 8(2), 9(2) and 10(1)(a) of the Federal Constitution.
The gist of the Court of Appeal’s reasoning could be summarised, inter alia, (i) that the competence of the State Legislature of Negri Sembilan on matters pertaining to the religion of Islam extends only insofar as to any conditions or restrictions imposed by the Federal Constitution; and (ii) that the State Legislative Assemblies in Malaysia including the State legislature of Negri Sembilan have no power to restrict freedom of speech and expression (and cross-dressing falls within such definition of expression). In other words, the Court is saying that the Negri Sembilan State Legislature went beyond its constitutional power in enacting such law as section 66 of the Enactment.
Fatal procedural non-compliance
Reading through the brief written judgment (the full written grounds of which has yet to be made public at the time of writing this piece), one could not help but wonder as to whether the Court of Appeal judges had fatally erred in entertaining such challenge to the constitutionality of the said provision in the State Enactment, especially in light of specific mandatory procedure in clauses (3) and (4) of Article 4 of the Federal Constitution, which seems, based from the brief written judgment, to have been overlooked and not been complied with.
Clauses (3) and (4) thereof provides that a party seeking to challenge the validity or constitutionality of any law can only do so in a proceeding which may only be commenced with leave of a Judge of the Federal Court. The key word here is that the leave must be from a judge of the Federal Court. It could not come from any judge of any lower rank. But a perusal of the brief judgment reveals that the leave for judicial review for this case, which was granted on November 4, 2011, was given not by a judge of the Federal Court, but rather by Rosnaini Saub J, who is a High Court judge. Therefore, clearly the leave granted was bad in law, for the learned judge was in no position to grant such leave, and as such the whole proceeding null and void; and likewise the whole appeal should have crumbled and fall at its very first instance.
The operation and rationale of such mandatory procedural requirement came into consideration by the Federal Court in 1976 and was explained in Ah Thian v Government of Malaysia. There, Suffian LP even went further by holding that clause (1) of Article 128 of the Federal Constitution further “provides that only the Federal Court has jurisdiction to determine whether a law made by … State legislature is invalid on the ground that it relates to a matter with respect to which the relevant legislature has no power to make law. This jurisdiction is exclusive to the Federal Court, no other court has it. This is to ensure that a law may be declared invalid on this very serious ground only after full consideration by the highest court in land.”
Of course, one could argue, that be that as it may, the matter would still in any event be heard by judges of the Federal Court, once it is appealed to the Federal Court. But this would be putting the cart before the horse, for how could the matter be allowed to be heard when the leave to hear the matter has not even been properly granted as yet? Suffice to say that this is such a fatal error which goes to the very foundation, and in the absence of which, the Court of Appeal should have just summarily dismissed the appeal for want of proper leave and due process.
Substantive constitutional issues
Moving on from the procedural aspect to the more substantive issues, looking at the Malaysian legal system as a whole, it must be admitted that syariah law plays a relatively small role in defining the laws of the country. For it only applies to Muslims. With regard to civil law, the syariah courts have jurisdiction in matters of personal law, such as marriage and inheritance. In some States, there are syariah criminal laws, such as the Kelantan Syariah Criminal Code Enactment 1993, and of course, the Syariah Criminal Enactment 1992 (Negri Sembilan). Their jurisdiction is however limited to imposing fines for an amount not more than RM5,000, imprisonment of not more than three years, and whipping of not more than six strokes.
The fundamental Islamic position is that Islamic law should not be subservient to secular law. This principle must be read in the context of Article 3(1) of the Federal Constitution, which puts Islam on a very high pedestal by declaring it the religion of the Federation. This in itself is not an allowable position for a secular government to take. But like it or not, this is exactly the position that the framers of our constitution had intended it to be. So now we are engaged in the process of deciding to what extent does this role of Islam in the Federal Constitution implies that Islamic law may NOT be lightly disregarded; and to what extent does it apply to persons professing the religion of Islam?
The Federal Court in 2005 had actually settled this. In Lina Joy v Majlis Agama Islam Wilayah Persekutuan & Ors, it was held that “Islam is not just a mere collection of dogmas and rituals but it is a complete way of life covering all fields of human activities, private or public, legal, political, economic, social, cultural, moral or judicial.” On top of such broad finding by the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal in the recent case of The Herald, had also gone further to hold that the position of Islam as the religion of the Federation is not merely ceremonial in nature, but rather it imposes obligations on the power that be to promote Islam, citing with approval an article by Muhammad Imam entitled Freedom of Religion under Federal Constitution of Malaysia – A Reappraisal, that “Article 3 is not a mere declaration. But it imposes positive obligation on the Federation … to give effect by appropriate state action, to the injunction of Islam and able to facilitate and encourage people to hold their life according to the Islamic injunction spiritual and daily life.”
It is in such light that one finds it difficult if not almost impossible to reconcile the Court of Appeal’s recent decision in excusing its appellants from criminal punishment based on the supposition that they suffer “Gender Identity Disorder”, a medical condition, as testified by various psychiatrists and other social experts. The court insists that because of such psychiatric condition, therefore, they have “human rights” that must be protected, even though they publicly and emphatically, as Muslims, practise non-Islamic behaviour. This is an impossible situation. Muslims excused from normal criminal punishment due to medical designations must at the very least be confined to treatment centres where their un-Islamic behaviour can be corrected by medical means. If such means are not readily available, they must be developed with all possible haste by the social experts who put the miscreants in such facilities.
It is pertinent to point out that the American position seems to be directly in contrast with our position here. While our Court of Appeal judges who declared section 66 of the Syariah Criminal (Negri Sembilan) Enactment 1992 against cross-dressing as unconstitutional seem to have bought “the pity card” played by the appellants in justifying their unnatural behaviour as symptoms of the medical condition called “GID”, or “Gender Identity Disorder”, as mentioned above, the Americans, however, prefer to hold that no such “disorder” exists. In fact the movement to declassify any form of gender or sexual preferences as decease had begun since 1973, when the American Psychiatric Association (APA) declassified unnatural preferences of gays and lesbians as psychological decease, following intimidation and lobbying from gay groups and activists, for they consider it demeaning and insulting for their preferences to be classified as a disease.
While it is noted that the Court of Appeal in its brief judgment referred to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM IV-TR) published by APA, where GID is considered a disease, the fact however is that in its fifth edition, published in 2013, the APA had decided to remove the term GID. Gender behaviour is now considered a free choice of equally free and mentally healthy citizens by the Americans.
The inevitable question would of course be is it or is it not a disease? If courts’ decisions can be made on the basis of a supposed Gender Identity Disorder which has been declared non-existent by the American Psychiatric Association, the next question that follows would be where, then, could religious law fit in? The Al-Qur’an clearly answers this question in the story of the Prophet Luth and his people. That answer is, whether the American psychiatrists like it or not, widespread GID behaviour is an affront to our Creator and will eventually result in Divine Retribution.
And yet the debate continues. In response to a submission by Iskandar Ali, State Legal Adviser of Negri Sembilan, which asserts Section 66 “is not prejudicial to the appellants as they are persons of unsound mind”, the Court of Appeal Judge Dato’ Hishamuddin Yunus writes, “n the absence of medical evidence, it is absurd and insulting to suggest that the appellants and other transgender [individuals] are persons of unsound mind”.
On the contrary, the American position can also be argued to place GID behaviour squarely into the realm of social behaviour that can be legislated the same as any other overt public behaviour. This is similar to the challenge mounted by the United Nations Human Rights Council to Malaysia, which dialogue has not yet reached closure, even though Malaysia has recently been elected to sit on the Security Council itself. The United Nations wants to protect all manner of gender deviance under the protective rubric of “human rights”. And so, evidently, does our own Court of Appeals judge. And yet, how can this secular concept of “human rights” simply dismiss almost universal religious opinion to the contrary?
The decision of the Court of Appeal implies that even so-called Muslim deviants must enjoy the freedom of behaviour and dress implied by any constitution, including that of Malaysia. Can we allow this decision to stand? In fact, the Court of Appeal in reaching such a finding, had applied and followed, almost in-toto, the decisions of the courts of foreign countries, namely that of the Indian Supreme Court’s in National Legal Services Authority v Union of India & Ors, as well as the United States Supreme Court’s in Tinker v Des Moines Independent Community School District. This is alarming, especially when such importations of foreign principles fail to take into consideration the inherent and irreconcilable differences that exist between our constitution and the constitutions of those countries, particularly with respect to the absence of any religion of the federation in the Indian and United States constitutions, very much unlike ours.
This indeed calls for serious concern, not only for those in the legal fraternity, but also all Malaysians at large, for it goes contrary to long-held principle as established by various judicial precedents of our own courts, that the interpretation of our Federal Constitution must be free from outside interferences. In 1975, for instance, Raja Azlan Shah FJ (as the late Royal Highness then was), in giving the judgment of the Federal Court in Loh Kooi Choon v the Government of Malaysia held that “our Constitution now stands in its own right and it is in the end the wording of our Constitution itself that is to be interpreted and applied, and this wording ‘can never be overridden by the extraneous principles of other Constitution’.” Further, even prior to that, in 1963, the Federal Court in The Government of Kelantan v The Government of the Federation of Malaya & Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra al-Haj had held that our “Constitution is primarily to be interpreted within its own four walls and not in the light of analogies drawn from other countries such as Great Britain, the United States of America or Australia”.
If the syariah law could be dismissed in such a manner by drawing principles from foreign constitutions, one would shudder to think what would and could happen to the position of Islam as the religion of the Federation.
In the light of all of the above, one would have to suggest that the only way forward would be for the State religious authorities to appeal to the Federal Court and to all of Malaysia as a sovereign Islamic political entity to reassert her position at the international level. Perhaps we need to revisit our position at the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and recent United Nations reviews and requests.
*Azril Mohd Amin is a lawyer and Executive Director of the Centre for Human Rights Research and Advocacy (CENTHRA), while Aidil Khalid is a lawyer and senior fellow of CENTHRA.
- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/what-you-think/article/transgender-case-court-of-appeal-error-azril-mohd-amin-and-aidil-khalid#sthash.X1wYoUmZ.dpuf
NOVEMBER 17 — Somewhere along the line, the civil courts would have to stop niggling away at the syariah courts. So does the civil common law at the Islamic law. These courts and laws are not meant to engage in a power struggle against each other; they are meant to complement each other.
The constitutional provision is clear. Article 121(1A) provides for a dual legal system, wherein the civil or secular law goes hand in hand with the Islamic law. The implication of which is that secular law cannot be used to modify syariah law — although the former is within the federal list, while the latter the state list — neither could the civil courts intervene in matters that fall within the jurisdiction of the syariah courts. To do so would be an affront to the very structure of our legal system. These are basics, of which even first-year law students are expected to know, what more judges of the Court of Appeal.
Alleged unconstitutionalities
Notwithstanding Article 121(1A), however, Article 4(1) of the Federal Constitution on the other hand provides that the constitution is supreme, and as such any law which is inconsistent with its provisions would very much be opened for challenge. The courts, therefore, have the power to declare any law unconstitutional to the extent of its inconsistency with the constitution. And this, the Court of Appeal verily did, in its recent judgment on transgender and cross-dressing, wherein the three panel judges who sat and heard Muhamad Juzaili bin Mohd Khamis & 2 Ors v State Government of Negri Sembilan & 4 Ors unanimously held that section 66 of the Syariah Criminal Enactment 1992 (Negeri Sembilan) criminalising cross-dressing of any male person wearing a woman’s attire in public, as void for supposedly being inconsistent with Articles 5(1), 8(1), 8(2), 9(2) and 10(1)(a) of the Federal Constitution.
The gist of the Court of Appeal’s reasoning could be summarised, inter alia, (i) that the competence of the State Legislature of Negri Sembilan on matters pertaining to the religion of Islam extends only insofar as to any conditions or restrictions imposed by the Federal Constitution; and (ii) that the State Legislative Assemblies in Malaysia including the State legislature of Negri Sembilan have no power to restrict freedom of speech and expression (and cross-dressing falls within such definition of expression). In other words, the Court is saying that the Negri Sembilan State Legislature went beyond its constitutional power in enacting such law as section 66 of the Enactment.
Fatal procedural non-compliance
Reading through the brief written judgment (the full written grounds of which has yet to be made public at the time of writing this piece), one could not help but wonder as to whether the Court of Appeal judges had fatally erred in entertaining such challenge to the constitutionality of the said provision in the State Enactment, especially in light of specific mandatory procedure in clauses (3) and (4) of Article 4 of the Federal Constitution, which seems, based from the brief written judgment, to have been overlooked and not been complied with.
Clauses (3) and (4) thereof provides that a party seeking to challenge the validity or constitutionality of any law can only do so in a proceeding which may only be commenced with leave of a Judge of the Federal Court. The key word here is that the leave must be from a judge of the Federal Court. It could not come from any judge of any lower rank. But a perusal of the brief judgment reveals that the leave for judicial review for this case, which was granted on November 4, 2011, was given not by a judge of the Federal Court, but rather by Rosnaini Saub J, who is a High Court judge. Therefore, clearly the leave granted was bad in law, for the learned judge was in no position to grant such leave, and as such the whole proceeding null and void; and likewise the whole appeal should have crumbled and fall at its very first instance.
The operation and rationale of such mandatory procedural requirement came into consideration by the Federal Court in 1976 and was explained in Ah Thian v Government of Malaysia. There, Suffian LP even went further by holding that clause (1) of Article 128 of the Federal Constitution further “provides that only the Federal Court has jurisdiction to determine whether a law made by … State legislature is invalid on the ground that it relates to a matter with respect to which the relevant legislature has no power to make law. This jurisdiction is exclusive to the Federal Court, no other court has it. This is to ensure that a law may be declared invalid on this very serious ground only after full consideration by the highest court in land.”
Of course, one could argue, that be that as it may, the matter would still in any event be heard by judges of the Federal Court, once it is appealed to the Federal Court. But this would be putting the cart before the horse, for how could the matter be allowed to be heard when the leave to hear the matter has not even been properly granted as yet? Suffice to say that this is such a fatal error which goes to the very foundation, and in the absence of which, the Court of Appeal should have just summarily dismissed the appeal for want of proper leave and due process.
Substantive constitutional issues
Moving on from the procedural aspect to the more substantive issues, looking at the Malaysian legal system as a whole, it must be admitted that syariah law plays a relatively small role in defining the laws of the country. For it only applies to Muslims. With regard to civil law, the syariah courts have jurisdiction in matters of personal law, such as marriage and inheritance. In some States, there are syariah criminal laws, such as the Kelantan Syariah Criminal Code Enactment 1993, and of course, the Syariah Criminal Enactment 1992 (Negri Sembilan). Their jurisdiction is however limited to imposing fines for an amount not more than RM5,000, imprisonment of not more than three years, and whipping of not more than six strokes.
The fundamental Islamic position is that Islamic law should not be subservient to secular law. This principle must be read in the context of Article 3(1) of the Federal Constitution, which puts Islam on a very high pedestal by declaring it the religion of the Federation. This in itself is not an allowable position for a secular government to take. But like it or not, this is exactly the position that the framers of our constitution had intended it to be. So now we are engaged in the process of deciding to what extent does this role of Islam in the Federal Constitution implies that Islamic law may NOT be lightly disregarded; and to what extent does it apply to persons professing the religion of Islam?
The Federal Court in 2005 had actually settled this. In Lina Joy v Majlis Agama Islam Wilayah Persekutuan & Ors, it was held that “Islam is not just a mere collection of dogmas and rituals but it is a complete way of life covering all fields of human activities, private or public, legal, political, economic, social, cultural, moral or judicial.” On top of such broad finding by the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal in the recent case of The Herald, had also gone further to hold that the position of Islam as the religion of the Federation is not merely ceremonial in nature, but rather it imposes obligations on the power that be to promote Islam, citing with approval an article by Muhammad Imam entitled Freedom of Religion under Federal Constitution of Malaysia – A Reappraisal, that “Article 3 is not a mere declaration. But it imposes positive obligation on the Federation … to give effect by appropriate state action, to the injunction of Islam and able to facilitate and encourage people to hold their life according to the Islamic injunction spiritual and daily life.”
It is in such light that one finds it difficult if not almost impossible to reconcile the Court of Appeal’s recent decision in excusing its appellants from criminal punishment based on the supposition that they suffer “Gender Identity Disorder”, a medical condition, as testified by various psychiatrists and other social experts. The court insists that because of such psychiatric condition, therefore, they have “human rights” that must be protected, even though they publicly and emphatically, as Muslims, practise non-Islamic behaviour. This is an impossible situation. Muslims excused from normal criminal punishment due to medical designations must at the very least be confined to treatment centres where their un-Islamic behaviour can be corrected by medical means. If such means are not readily available, they must be developed with all possible haste by the social experts who put the miscreants in such facilities.
It is pertinent to point out that the American position seems to be directly in contrast with our position here. While our Court of Appeal judges who declared section 66 of the Syariah Criminal (Negri Sembilan) Enactment 1992 against cross-dressing as unconstitutional seem to have bought “the pity card” played by the appellants in justifying their unnatural behaviour as symptoms of the medical condition called “GID”, or “Gender Identity Disorder”, as mentioned above, the Americans, however, prefer to hold that no such “disorder” exists. In fact the movement to declassify any form of gender or sexual preferences as decease had begun since 1973, when the American Psychiatric Association (APA) declassified unnatural preferences of gays and lesbians as psychological decease, following intimidation and lobbying from gay groups and activists, for they consider it demeaning and insulting for their preferences to be classified as a disease.
While it is noted that the Court of Appeal in its brief judgment referred to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM IV-TR) published by APA, where GID is considered a disease, the fact however is that in its fifth edition, published in 2013, the APA had decided to remove the term GID. Gender behaviour is now considered a free choice of equally free and mentally healthy citizens by the Americans.
The inevitable question would of course be is it or is it not a disease? If courts’ decisions can be made on the basis of a supposed Gender Identity Disorder which has been declared non-existent by the American Psychiatric Association, the next question that follows would be where, then, could religious law fit in? The Al-Qur’an clearly answers this question in the story of the Prophet Luth and his people. That answer is, whether the American psychiatrists like it or not, widespread GID behaviour is an affront to our Creator and will eventually result in Divine Retribution.
And yet the debate continues. In response to a submission by Iskandar Ali, State Legal Adviser of Negri Sembilan, which asserts Section 66 “is not prejudicial to the appellants as they are persons of unsound mind”, the Court of Appeal Judge Dato’ Hishamuddin Yunus writes, “n the absence of medical evidence, it is absurd and insulting to suggest that the appellants and other transgender [individuals] are persons of unsound mind”.
On the contrary, the American position can also be argued to place GID behaviour squarely into the realm of social behaviour that can be legislated the same as any other overt public behaviour. This is similar to the challenge mounted by the United Nations Human Rights Council to Malaysia, which dialogue has not yet reached closure, even though Malaysia has recently been elected to sit on the Security Council itself. The United Nations wants to protect all manner of gender deviance under the protective rubric of “human rights”. And so, evidently, does our own Court of Appeals judge. And yet, how can this secular concept of “human rights” simply dismiss almost universal religious opinion to the contrary?
The decision of the Court of Appeal implies that even so-called Muslim deviants must enjoy the freedom of behaviour and dress implied by any constitution, including that of Malaysia. Can we allow this decision to stand? In fact, the Court of Appeal in reaching such a finding, had applied and followed, almost in-toto, the decisions of the courts of foreign countries, namely that of the Indian Supreme Court’s in National Legal Services Authority v Union of India & Ors, as well as the United States Supreme Court’s in Tinker v Des Moines Independent Community School District. This is alarming, especially when such importations of foreign principles fail to take into consideration the inherent and irreconcilable differences that exist between our constitution and the constitutions of those countries, particularly with respect to the absence of any religion of the federation in the Indian and United States constitutions, very much unlike ours.
This indeed calls for serious concern, not only for those in the legal fraternity, but also all Malaysians at large, for it goes contrary to long-held principle as established by various judicial precedents of our own courts, that the interpretation of our Federal Constitution must be free from outside interferences. In 1975, for instance, Raja Azlan Shah FJ (as the late Royal Highness then was), in giving the judgment of the Federal Court in Loh Kooi Choon v the Government of Malaysia held that “our Constitution now stands in its own right and it is in the end the wording of our Constitution itself that is to be interpreted and applied, and this wording ‘can never be overridden by the extraneous principles of other Constitution’.” Further, even prior to that, in 1963, the Federal Court in The Government of Kelantan v The Government of the Federation of Malaya & Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra al-Haj had held that our “Constitution is primarily to be interpreted within its own four walls and not in the light of analogies drawn from other countries such as Great Britain, the United States of America or Australia”.
If the syariah law could be dismissed in such a manner by drawing principles from foreign constitutions, one would shudder to think what would and could happen to the position of Islam as the religion of the Federation.
In the light of all of the above, one would have to suggest that the only way forward would be for the State religious authorities to appeal to the Federal Court and to all of Malaysia as a sovereign Islamic political entity to reassert her position at the international level. Perhaps we need to revisit our position at the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and recent United Nations reviews and requests.
*Azril Mohd Amin is a lawyer and Executive Director of the Centre for Human Rights Research and Advocacy (CENTHRA), while Aidil Khalid is a lawyer and senior fellow of CENTHRA.
- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/what-you-think/article/transgender-case-court-of-appeal-error-azril-mohd-amin-and-aidil-khalid#sthash.X1wYoUmZ.dpuf

13 November 2014

UNDANG-UNDANG GUBALAN KEHAKIMAN?


Adakah Seksyen 377B KK yang menghukum peliwat
boleh diisytiharkan tidak sah mengikut Perlembagaan
kerana ‘tidak munasabah’ sebagaimana Seksyen 66 EJSNS
yang menghukum maknyah, bapuk dan pondan?
Inilah implikasi keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan!
Salam 2 all.

Melarang lelaki berpakaian menyerupai wanita adalah hukum syara' yang qati' - tidak ada keraguan atau pertikaian padanya. Ini bersesuaian dengan hadis Rasulullah saw bermaksud:

Sabda Rasulullah SAW : عن ابن عباس رضي الله عنهما قال : لعن النبي صلى الله عليه وسلم المخنثين من الرجال ، المترجلات من النساء Maksudnya : Daripada Ibn Anas r.a berkata Rasulullah SAW melaknat mereka yang menyerupai wanita daripada kalangan lelaki dan mereka yang menyerupai lelaki daripada kalangan wanita (HR al Bukhari).

Bermakna Seksyen 66 Enakmen Jenayah Syariah Negeri Sembilan yang melarang dan menetapkan hukuman terhadap pesalah syarie' tersebut adalah menurut hukum Islam!

Kuasa dan bidangkuasa membuat undang-undang kesalahan syarie' ini adalah hak mutlak Dewan Undangan Negeri Sembilan menurut Artikel 74 dibaca bersama Jadual 9 Senarai II Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Dan Mahkamah yang berbidangkuasa membicarakan dan menjatuhkan hukuman adalah Mahkamah Syariah Negeri Sembilan. Dan Mahkamah Sivil tidak boleh sama sekali mencampuri atau menganggu keputusan Mahkamah Syariah menurut Artikel 121 (1A) Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Jadi persoalannya bagaimana kes empat orang maknyah (Juzaili & 3 yang lain) yang telah dibicarakan dan disabit kesalahan oleh Mahkamah Syariah Seremban boleh dibicarakan oleh Mahkamah Rayuan yang kemudiannya telah pada 07 Nov 2014 lepas mengisytiharkan Seksyen 66 EJSNS sebagai batal dan tidak sah menurut Perlembagaan?

Mengiktu proses kehakiman, sepatutnya maknyah-maknyah ini mengemukakan rayuan kepada Mahkamah Rayuan Negeri Sembilan terhadap sabitan dan hukuman oleh Mahkamah Rendah Syariah Seremban terhadap mereka. Tetapi sebaliknya mereka menggunakan 'pintu belakang' dan memfailkan permohonan semakan kehakiman mencabar keabsahan Seksyen 66 EJSNS di Mahkamah Sivil.

Dan dalam keadaan peruntukkan Perlembagaan dan undang-undang yang terang lagi jelas bahawa kuasa dan bidangkuasa membuat undang-undang jenayah syarie' adalah terletak dibawah DUN Negeri Sembilan dan bidangkuasa perlaksanaannya oleh Mahkamah Syariah Negeri Sembilan, bagaimana pula Mahkamah Rayuan Sivil boleh membatalkan Seksyen 66 EJSNS?

Jawapannya ialah apa yang saya sebut 'judicial law making' - 'penciptaan undang-undang kehakiman'.

Ini kerana Mahkamah Rayuan mengguna-pakai prinsip kemunasabahan - reasonableness dalam menilai undang-undang yang telah digubal dengan sahnya oleh badan pembuat undang-undang negara ini.

Prinsipnya mudah - jika Mahkamah merasakan bahawa sesuatu undang-undang itu tidak munasabah, Mahkamah akan mengisytiharkan ianya sebagai tidak sah!

Persoalan pertama yang timbul ialah bolehkah Mahkamah di Malaysia berbuat sedemikian? Sedangkan prinsip berkerajaan di Malaysia ialah prinsip pemisahan dan pengasingan kuasa antara 3 badan iaitu Parlimen (termasuk DUN) sebagai pembuat undang-undang, Kehakiman (sebagai penjaga (custodian) undang-undang) dan Eksekutif (sebagai pelaksana undang-undang).

Pada pendapat saya didalam kes Juzaili ini Mahkamah Rayuan telah melangkaui kuasa dan bidangkuasanya kerana dalam amalan kehakiman di Malaysia, Mahkamah TIDAK BOLEH SAMA SEKALI membuat, mencipta atau menggubal undang-undang sendiri!

Persoalan kedua, apakah kayu pengukur yang digunakan oleh Mahkamah Rayuan dalam menentukan samada sesuatu undang-undang itu tidak munasabah?

Didalam kes Juzaili, ternyatakayu pengukur yang diguna-pakai oleh Mahkamah ialah dengan merujuk dan menggunakan prinsip dan amalan hak asasi manusia yang diterima pakai dan diamalkan oleh masyarakat Barat menurut amalan dan kehidupan mereka sebagaimana yang diperuntukkan didalam Deklarasi Hak Asasi Manusia yang Malaysia tidak tandatangani dan absahkan!

Pengamalan hak asasi barat ini tidak boleh diterima bulat-bulat disini kerana Malaysia adalah sebuah negara umat Islam sebagaimana diperuntukkan dengan jelas dibawah Artikel 3 Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Sepatutnya kalau benar pun Mahkamah Rayuan mahu menggunakan prinsip kemunasabahan didalam menentukan keabsahan sesuatu undang-undang, kayu pengukurnya hendaklah berdasarkan dan mengikut prinsip-prinsip syariah dan undang-undang Islam; bukannya kayu pengukur barat!

Jika keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan diterima, maka banjiran-perundangan akan berlaku!

Contohnya dalam kes liwat terhadap Anwar Ibrahim yang dituduh dan disabit kesalahan dibawah Seksyen 377B Kanun Kesiksaan. Adalah jelas ini adalah undang-undang yang telah digubal dan dikanunkan dengan sah oleh Parlimen Malaysia yang menjadikan liwat sebagai suatu kesalahan jenayah yang boleh dihukum berat oleh Mahkamah Jenayah Sivil.

Jika menerima pakai keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan dalam kes Juzaili yang mengguna-pakai kayu pengukur barat, maka adalah tidak mustahil suatu hari nanti akan ada pihak membawa kes untuk membatalkan Seksyen 377B Kanun Kesiksaan sebagai melanggar Perlembagaan kerana 'tidak munasabah' berdasarkan prinsip Hak Asasi Kemanusiaan sebagaimana ditetapkan oleh barat melalui Deklarasi Hak Asasi Kemanusiaan; kerana barat sudah menerima amalan seks songsang, seks luar tabi'e dan kawin sejenis sebagai hak asasi mereka!

Tetapi jika kita menerima dan mengguna-pakai keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan itu, saya tidak menafikan bahawa pembatalan peruntukkan undang-undang yang melarang amalan seks songsang, seks bebas dan kahwin sesama jenis adalah suatu kebarangkalian yang hampir pasti boleh berlaku!

Persoalannya, adakah kita mahu memberi badan kehakiman kuasa membuat undang-undang seperti itu? Jawapannya pada saya jelas - TIDAK BOLEH - kerana Malaysia mengamalkan pemisahan kuasa perundangan yang jelas - Pembuat (Parlimen), Penjaga (Mahkamah) dan Pelaksana (Eksekutif)! 

Prinsip pemisahan kuasa perundangan ini wajib dipelihara dan dikuatkuasakan dengan tegas!

Atas alasan-alasan diatas sahaja saya berpendapat keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan dalam kes Juzaili tidak boleh diterima dan hendaklah ditolak.

Saya dengan ini menasihatkan Kerajaan Negeri Sembilan supaya memfailkan rayuan ke Mahkamah Persekutuan dan memohon supaya keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan itu dibatalkan.

Adioa amigos, grasias senor.

Zulkifli Bin Noordin
Khamis
20 Muharram 1436
13 Nov 2014

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Dipetik dengan izin daripada http://www.tunabdulhamid.my/index.php/speech-papers-lectures/item/738-ulasan-penghakiman-kes-muhamad-juzaili

CA NO-01-498 11/2012
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STATE GOVERNMENT OF NEGERI SEMBILAN DLL

ULASAN

Oleh
Tun Abdul Hamid Mohamad (Mantan Ketua Hakim Negara)

Saya telah membaca “Penghakiman Ringkas” Mahkamah Rayuan dalam kes tersebut.

Fakta yang tidak dipertikikan adalah Perayu-Perayu adalah lelaki, beragama Islam dan menghadapi “a medical condition” yang dikenali sebagai “Gender Identity Disorder (GID)”. Oleh sebab keadaan itu, semenjak muda, mereka berkelakuan seperti perempuan, termasuk memakai pakaian perempuan.

Mereka telah ditangkap, dihadapkan ke Mahkamah Syari’ah dan dihukum beberapa kali di bawah seksyen 66 Enakment Jenayah Syariah Negeri Sembilan 1992 (EJSNS).

Mereka membuat permohonan di Mahkamah Tinggi meminta mahkamah mengisytiharkan seksyen 66 EJSNS bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan Persekutun dan, oleh itu, tak sah dan batal.
Mahkamah Tinggi menolak permohonan mereka.

Mereka merayu ke Mahkamah Rayuan. Mahkamah Rayuan membenarkan rayuan mereka dan membuat peritah seperti yang dipohon oleh mereka.

Seksyen 66 EJSNS memperuntukkan:

Mana-mana orang lelaki yang memakai pakaian perempuan atau berlagak seperti perempuan di mana-mana tempat awam adalah melakukan satu kesalahan dan hendaklah apabila disabitkan dikenakan hukuman denda tidak melebihi satu ribu ringgit atau penjara selama tempoh tidak melebihi enam bulan atau kedua-duanya.

Tiga perkara perlu diambil perhatian dari awal ialah, pertama, mereka bukan merayu terhadap sabitan dan hukuman terhadap mereka oleh Mahkamah Syariah. Mereka memohon supaya Mahkamah Tinggi (Mahkamah Sivil) mengisytiharakn bahawa peruntukan seksyen 66 itu tak sah kerana bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Bidangkuasa mentafsir Perlembagaan Persekutuan terletak di bawah bidangkuasa Mahkamah Sivil.

Demikian juga bidangkuasa mengisytihar sesuatu undang-undang itu tak sah kerana bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan Persekutuan terletak di bawah bidangkuasa Mahkamah Sivil. Oleh itu, dari segi bidangkuasa, permohonan itu adalah betul.

Kedua, tidak dipertikaikan bahawa kesalahan itu adalah satu kesalahan terhadap “perintah” (“precepts”) agama Islam yang terletak di bawah bidangkuasa Negeri dan bukan “undag-udang jenayah” yang terletak di bawah bidangkuasa Persekutuan.

Ketiga, Mahkamah mendapati peruntukan Seksyen 66 itu tak sah bukan kerana ia “undang-undang jenayah” yang terletak di bawah bidangkuasa Persekutuan, tetapi kerana ia melanggar Perkara 5(1) (kebebasan diri), 8(1) (kesamarataan), 8(2) (diskriminasi), 9(2) (kebebasan bergerak) dan 10(1)(a) (kebebasan bercakap dan bersuara).

Apa yang merisaukan saya ialah alasan-alasan yang diberi untuk mengisytihar seksyen 66 itu bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Mereka mengabaikan peruntukan Perlembagaan Persekutuan yang mengiktiraf kesalahan terhadap perintah agama Islam.

Bagi saya, jika mereka menerima bahawa kesalahan itu adalah kesalahan terhadap perintah agama Islam (sebenarnya mereka terima kedudukan itu), maka sepatutnya mereka mengesahkan bahawa peruntukan itu sah di sisi Perlembagaan. Ini kerena Perlembagaan Persekutuan memberi kuasa kepada Badan Perundangan Negeri untuk membuat undang-undang itu.
Sebaliknya, mereka merujuk kepada peruntukan-peruntukan lain, lebih-lebih lagi merujuk dan mengikuti penghakiman-penghakiman Supreme Court Amerika Syarikat dan India.

Perlembagaan negara-negara itu tidak serupa dengan Perlembagaan kita. Perlembagaan mereka tidak ada peruntukan-peruntukan mengenai agama Islam seperti yang ada dalam Perlembagaan kita. Nilai-nilai mereka tidak sama dengan nilai kita. Hakim-hakim itu juga nampaknya sangat terpengaruh dengan tafsiran hak asasi manusia ala-Barat.

Akibatnya, mereka memberi tafsiran yang sangat liberal megenai peruntukan-peruntukan Perlembagaan Persekutuan mengenai kebebasan.

Mereka juga memakai prinsip “reasonableness” yang diketengahkan oleh Supreme Court India yang memberi kuasa kepada Hakim-Hakim untuk mengisytiharkan undang-undang yang dibuat oleh Parlimen tidak sah atas alasan ianya “unreasonable”.

Itu sudah melanggar bidangkuasa Badan Perundangan (Parlimen).

Mahkamah hanya boleh mengisytiharkan sesuatu undang-undang itu tak sah jika ia bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan, bukan kerana pada pandangan seseorang Hakim undang-undang itu “unreasonable”.

Alasan-alasan yang diberi oleh mahkamah itu sangat luas implikasiya.

Apabila sesuatu hukum syarak boleh diisytiharkan bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan Persekutuan berdasarkan tafsiran yang liberal seperti yang diberi oleh mahkamah-mahkamah di negara-negara sekular itu; apabila hukum syarak diukur dengan nilai-nilai liberal hak asasi ala-Barat; apabila hukum syarak boleh dicabar atas alasan ianya “unreasonable” kepada seseorang Hakim, termasuk yang bukan Islam, maka hukum syarak akan sentiasa terdedah kepada kemungkinan diisytiharkann tak sah.

Menggunakan alasan-lasan yang sama, undang-undang yang membenarkan seorang lelaki Islam berkahwin lebih dari satu; undang-undang yang menjadikan kesalahan jika seorang Islam tidak membayar zakat; kesalahan meminum minuman yang memabukkan; kesalahan zina dan liwat dan lain-lain juga boleh diisytiharkan tak sah.

Malah penghakiman ini membuka jalan untuk membenarkan perkahwinan sejenis.

Nampaknya, apa yang saya khuatir akan berlaku telah mula berlaku.

(Lihat kertas kerja saya “Hak Asasi Manusia: Peranan dan Fungsi Dari Perspektif Perlembagaan Malaysia.” (20 November 2013); “Hak Asasi Manusia Dari Perspektif Tradisi Islam dan Perlembagaan Malaysia” (24 Januari 2014) dan “Hak Asasi Manusia Dari Perspektif Tradisi Islam dan Perlembagaan Malaysia” (14 Oktober 2014), semuanya boleh didapati dalam laman web saya: www.tunabdulhamid.my

Sekian.
11 November 2014