I have little interest in visiting nations known for oppressive laws among certain groups, depriving them of basic civil rights. Women and gays are often singled out as targets for these oppressive laws. Sharia Law represents the most extreme.
Here is a sobering article that discusses Sharia Law and how Brunei, the first East Asian country to adopt Sharia Law, will implement it. See link to article here: http://www.policymic.com/articles/88733/it-will-soon-be-legal-to-stone-g
It Will Soon Be Legal to Stone Gay
People to Death in This Country
By Lauren Davidson
May 1, 2014
It
just became harder to be female or gay in Brunei.
Brunei
will be introducing its Islamic legal system in three phases. As of May 1,
failure to attend Friday prayer services and pregnancy outside of marriage
could result in fines or imprisonment. The second phase, to be implemented next
year, will see theft punishable by amputation. By 2015 crimes such as
blasphemy, adultery and consensual homosexual sex will warrant the death
penalty by stoning.
Sultan
Hassanal Bolkiah, the nation's absolute monarch, first proposed sharia law in
the 1990s, and has called Islam a "firewall"
against globalization, rising crime and modern influences
like the Internet.
Brunei,
which shares the island of Borneo with Malaysia and Indonesia, already followed
stricter Islam-inspired laws than its neighbors, banning the sale of alcohol
and restricting the practice of other religions. Around 70% of its
412,000-strong population are Malay Muslims, but even non-Muslim Bruneians (who
are mostly of Chinese descent) will be subject to the sharia code.
The
UN criticized the move, saying the punishments constitute torture and are
therefore illegal in the eyes of international law. The UN's spokesman for the
high commissioner for human rights pointed to several studies that show that
women are more likely to suffer at the hands of sharia law, due to deep-seated
discrimination and stereotyping in the justice system.
Although
cases under the new sharia law will require an extremely high burden of proof
and judges have been urged to act with discretion, criminalizing homosexuality
and limiting female autonomy have a chilling effect and create an environment
that negates human rights and inhibits personal freedom. This chilling effect
is clear in other countries where homosexuality has recently been criminalized,
such as Uganda. That country's strict anti-gay laws has already led to
instances of anti-gay bigotry, including the public outing of reported members of the LGBT community by Ugandan
tabloids.
In
Brunei specifically, the changes "may open the floodgates for further
human rights violations against women, children and other people on the basis
of sexual orientation and gender identity," the Asia Pacific
Coalition on Male Sexual Health and Islands of Southeast Asian Network on Male
and Transgender Sexual Health said in a statement.
They
added that the sharia penal code "significantly impacts the lives and
sexual health of its citizens most vulnerable to HIV: men who have sex with
men, transgender people and young people from key populations. Under this
light, penalties directed to sexual relations between two consenting adults
impede rights to health, privacy, confidentiality and equality before civil
law."
Several
countries have been adopting more progressive attitudes toward the LGBT
community in recent years, decriminalizing homosexuality and legalizing same-sex
marriage. Yet other nations are taking steps
in the opposite direction: In February, Uganda passed a bill that makes
"aggravated homosexuality" punishable with life
imprisonment, just weeks after India's Supreme
Court overturned a lower-court ruling, reinstating a ban on gay
sex, punishable by up to 10 years in
jail.
Previously
the maximum punishment in Brunei for gay activity wasa 10-year prison sentence. Homosexuality is illegal in around 80
countries, and Brunei now joins a handful of
countries (spread across the Middle East and West Africa) where consensual gay
sex — living openly, comfortably and naturally — could cost you your
life.
Image credit: CBC News
News of the legal changes in Brunei
has so far been met with outrage and dismay by activists around the world,
including in the U.S. In Los Angeles, activists have banded together to boycott the landmark Beverly Hills Hotel, after it
was revealed that the famous spot was owned by a development company
controlled by the Sultan of Brunei, Hassanal Bolkiah. Even influential
television host Ellen Degeneres has lent her support to the boycott, notifying
her social media followers that she will be staying elsewhere for the time
being.
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