The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison

In Malaysia, serious crimes such as murder, robbery and rape increasing significantly and has leads to the proposal of amending several criminal laws, where the Bill to amend 11 statutes are tabled in Parliament. These amendments and other efforts taken by the government are expected to solve al...

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Main Authors: Lily Suryati, Mohd Jamil, Nur Amani, Pauzai, Mohd Badrol, Awang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4951/1/FH02-FUHA-16-06100.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4951/
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spelling my-unisza-ir.49512022-01-30T07:53:52Z http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4951/ The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison Lily Suryati, Mohd Jamil Nur Amani, Pauzai Mohd Badrol, Awang BP Islam. Bahaism. Theosophy, etc KZ Law of Nations In Malaysia, serious crimes such as murder, robbery and rape increasing significantly and has leads to the proposal of amending several criminal laws, where the Bill to amend 11 statutes are tabled in Parliament. These amendments and other efforts taken by the government are expected to solve all the problems. Meanwhile, the demand to implement Shari‘ah criminal law, which includes Hudud and Qisas, is still on debate among the politicians, academicians and even the public at large. Despite the fact that Shari‘ah Criminal Offence (Hudud and Qisas) Enactment has been gazetted in Terengganu and a bill had been passed in Kelantan, but no enforcement can be made due to constitutional issues. Unlike Malaysia, the Brunei government has gazetted the Shari‘ah Penal Code on 22nd October 2013 and come into effect in April 2014. The objectives of this article is to analyse the constitutional issues that leads to the inability of the enforcement of Shari‘ah criminal law in Malaysia and to compare it with the Brunei’s constitution that allows the enforcement of Shari‘ah Penal Code. This article also discusses on the position of Islamic religion and other fundamental provisions in both constitutions to determine future position of Shari’ah criminal law in both countries. 2014-06 Article PeerReviewed text en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4951/1/FH02-FUHA-16-06100.pdf Lily Suryati, Mohd Jamil and Nur Amani, Pauzai and Mohd Badrol, Awang (2014) The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison. Journal of Islamic Law Review, 10 (1). pp. 77-92. ISSN 0973-2918
institution Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
building UNISZA Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
content_source UNISZA Institutional Repository
url_provider https://eprints.unisza.edu.my/
language English
topic BP Islam. Bahaism. Theosophy, etc
KZ Law of Nations
spellingShingle BP Islam. Bahaism. Theosophy, etc
KZ Law of Nations
Lily Suryati, Mohd Jamil
Nur Amani, Pauzai
Mohd Badrol, Awang
The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison
description In Malaysia, serious crimes such as murder, robbery and rape increasing significantly and has leads to the proposal of amending several criminal laws, where the Bill to amend 11 statutes are tabled in Parliament. These amendments and other efforts taken by the government are expected to solve all the problems. Meanwhile, the demand to implement Shari‘ah criminal law, which includes Hudud and Qisas, is still on debate among the politicians, academicians and even the public at large. Despite the fact that Shari‘ah Criminal Offence (Hudud and Qisas) Enactment has been gazetted in Terengganu and a bill had been passed in Kelantan, but no enforcement can be made due to constitutional issues. Unlike Malaysia, the Brunei government has gazetted the Shari‘ah Penal Code on 22nd October 2013 and come into effect in April 2014. The objectives of this article is to analyse the constitutional issues that leads to the inability of the enforcement of Shari‘ah criminal law in Malaysia and to compare it with the Brunei’s constitution that allows the enforcement of Shari‘ah Penal Code. This article also discusses on the position of Islamic religion and other fundamental provisions in both constitutions to determine future position of Shari’ah criminal law in both countries.
format Article
author Lily Suryati, Mohd Jamil
Nur Amani, Pauzai
Mohd Badrol, Awang
author_facet Lily Suryati, Mohd Jamil
Nur Amani, Pauzai
Mohd Badrol, Awang
author_sort Lily Suryati, Mohd Jamil
title The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison
title_short The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison
title_full The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison
title_fullStr The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison
title_full_unstemmed The Position of Shariah Criminal Law in Malaysia and Brunei : A Comparison
title_sort position of shariah criminal law in malaysia and brunei : a comparison
publishDate 2014
url http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4951/1/FH02-FUHA-16-06100.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4951/
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score 13.214268