http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2009/09/2009929524586283.html

Tuesday, September 29, 2009 
10:41 Mecca time, 07:41 GMT 

      Malaysia caning sentence upheld 
     
     
                 
                  Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno would be the first Muslim woman to 
be caned in Malaysia [AFP] 
           
      A Malaysian Islamic court has upheld the caning sentence for a Muslim 
woman convicted of drinking beer at a hotel, local media reports have said.

      If the punishment is carried out, Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno, a 
32-year-old mother of two, will become the first Muslim woman to be caned in 
the country.

      She had originally been due to be caned late last month, but at the last 
minute the sentence was put on hold during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

      At the time the government asked the Sharia High Court Appeals Panel in 
Kuantan, the capital of the eastern state of Pahang, to review the verdict.

      But late on Monday a chief judge with the court announced that the 
sentence would be upheld.

      Reacting to the news Kartika's father, Shukarno Abdul Muttlib, said that 
while the family had yet to be informed of the court's decision, his daughter 
"accepts the punishment" and would like it to be carried out as soon as 
possible.

      "We obey the law [and] it's a challenge ... [but] it's the way of my 
life," he told the Associated Press.

      No date has yet been set for the caning.

      Guilty plea

      Kartika, a former nurse turned part-time model, was sentenced in July to 
six strokes of the cane and a fine of $1,400 for drinking beer in 2007 at a 
beach resort.

      She had pleaded guilty in her original trial and had refused to appeal 
her sentence, despite an intervention from the Malaysian prime minister who 
said she would likely receive a sympathetic hearing if she did so.

      The case had caused an uproar in the media and among rights activists.

      Malaysia has a large Chinese and Indian community, but uses a dual-track 
legal system where sharia courts can try Muslims for religious and moral 
offences under Islamic law.

      Alcohol is widely available in the country but is forbidden for the 
majority Muslim community, who make up just over half the population.

      Symbolic

      The actual caning is expected to be carried out using a thin stick on the 
back and would be largely symbolic rather than aimed at causing pain.

      Caning under Malaysia's criminal law, used in the case of convicted 
rapists and drug smugglers, uses a thick rattan stick applied with heavy force 
on bare buttocks that causes the skin to break and leave scars.

      Nonetheless rights groups have said that even a gentle caning raises the 
broader question of the role of Islam in the justice system and whether Islamic 
laws should intrude into people's private lives.
     


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