Banda
Aceh, TAG - Aceh’s deputy governor said on Tuesday that there was no need to disband
the province’s Wilayatul Hisbah, or Shariah Police, because there was no legal
obligation to do so.
Muhammad
Nazar was speaking after three officers from the controversial Shariah Police
were arrested for allegedly gang-raping a 20-year-old university student
earlier this month. The incident was believed to have occurred after the woman
was detained by the suspects for allegedly violating public decency laws.
Dismissing
calls for the Shariah Police to be disbanded over the case, Nazar said the
alleged rape was not the fault of the organization.
“Just
because some individuals do something wrong does not mean the institution
should be disbanded,” he said. “Those who did wrong simply need to face harsh
punishments.”
But
Evi Narti Zein, a noted human rights activist in Aceh, said the Shariah Police
should be disbanded because they had proven themselves useless in implementing
Islamic law and were a waste of taxpayer money.
“All
they do is target and discriminate against women, scare people, particularly
women, with their raids and target women who do not cover their hair or who
wear tight clothing,” said Evi, executive director of the Coalition of Aceh
Human Rights NGOs.
“We
don’t want them to turn into a new paramilitary force. There’s no need for them
in Aceh since it only adds to the trauma experienced by Acehnese women.”
Evi
said the qanun , or Islamic code, served as the basis for the region’s
Shariah-inspired laws but police operations enforcing them were applied
selectively.
“So
many state officials, for instance, are caught engaging in immoral acts but
none of them ever face lashings. They pay a fine,” she said. “There was even a
[Shariah Police] official caught acting immorally with a woman in Banda Aceh,
but nothing happened to him.”
The
issue has made it to the Internet with groups on the social networking site
Facebook pushing for the Shariah Police to be disbanded. One group had
attracted more than 1,900 members as of Tuesday night, while another group
condemning the alleged rapists had drawn nearly 4,000 members.
Andre
Ahmad, founder of the group called Bubarkan WH di Aceh (Disband the Shariah
Police in Aceh), said that he had set up the group in response to “the tragic
and humiliating incident in the implementation of Islamic Shariah in Aceh.”
Evi
said she and other women’s rights activists in Aceh would fully support the
Shariah Police if they worked to ensure that the interests of the people — such
as the provision of good health services, affordable basic necessities and free
education — were fulfilled as required by Islamic law.
She
said Shariah principles would be better implemented through different
government agencies, not through law enforcers. “I’ve talked with members of
the Shariah Police in Meulaboh. They say they are only there to pass judgement
on people’s morals.”[]
Aceh Dismisses Calls to Disband Shariah Police
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
January 20, 2010
Rating:
No comments: