The Kelantan
Incest Case, 21 March 2000
Sisters in Islam views with concern the prosecution for
incest of a 17-year-old girl, by the Kelantan Syariah Court. There is an assumption here
that the daughter, considered a minor under civil law, is a willing partner in committing
the crime of incest.
The daughter initially pleaded not guilty and had defended
herself. However, the next day, after a discussion with her mother via telephone during a
break in the trial, she thereafter pleaded guilty to the charge of incest. The court bound
her over to be of good behaviour for one year with her mother standing surety. Since her
mother has failed to post the bond of $1,000, the girl was sentenced by the court and
committed to a rehabilitation home for one year.
While we welcome the Court's use of its discretionary
powers in not allowing the publication of the girl's name and its decision not to imprison
the girl, Sisters in Islam would like to raise some issues of concern, socially and
legally, in the handling of this case. Important issues which need to be considered:
- Is the girl a victim or a willing partner in the commission
of the crime of incest? What was the evidence that led to the assumption of guilt against
the girl and the decision of the Syariah Court to prosecute her? Even if it was felt that
the girl was a willing partner, due to her young age and the perpetrator was a figure of
authority and control, questions should arise as to the voluntary nature of her act. She
could have been a victim of child abuse, or she could have committed the act under duress
or coercion by the father.
- What are the safeguards that exist to ensure that her guilty
plea was indeed genuine? The fact that the girl had at first pleaded not guilty and then
changed her plea after speaking to her mother by telephone, the fact that the girl was in
tears after this conversation, that her mother was not in court to give her support,
should raise some concern and questions about the circumstances of her guilty plea.
- Given the nature of the crime and the relationship involved,
should the Court exercise its discretionary power and request for further information to
ascertain if a charge should in the first place be made against the girl? Could the Court
take the parties into chambers to discuss the matter and advise the prosecution to
withdraw the charge or order that the girl be discharged after due advice?
- Conflict between two parallel legal systems: The girl is a
minor under civil law (under 18 years of age). However, under syariah law she is
considered a "baligh" (one who has attained the age of puberty) and therefore a
"mukallaf", one who is of right mind and therefore able to distinguish between
what is good and bad and therefore take responsibility for her actions. Under syariah law,
once a girl begins menstruation, she is considered an adult and therefore liable to a
prosecution for illicit sex. Today, a girl may reach puberty at nine years of age, but
does that mean she is mature enough to be held responsible for her actions? Under civil
law and in society's eyes, she is a mere child. What provisions exist under syariah law to
protect the interest of children and young persons against crimes perpetrated by adults in
positions of authority and control over their well-being?
- We welcome the court's willingness to apply its
discretionary powers and consider the provisions provided in the civil law, more
specifically the Juvenile Courts Act, 1947 (JCA) in respect of the
non-publication of the girls name/identification (s. 5A of the JCA) and in binding
her over to be in good behaviour for one year. We wished, however, that the court could
also have used its discretionary powers in considering the girl a juvenile instead of an
adult and accord her the procedures provided for under the JCA.
- In what way was the girl's interest protected in the
handling of this case? Under the JCA (s. 10), such a case would be referred to a Probation
Officer who would provide the Court with information as to the girl's general conduct,
home surroundings, school record, medical history so as to enable the Court to deal with
the case in the best interests of the juvenile. The Juvenile Court will also not hold a
hearing without the report of the Probation Officer. Moreover, the court is assisted by
two advisers, one of whom is a woman, whose duty it is to inform and advise the court with
respect to any consideration affecting the punishment or other treatment of any child or
young person brought before it (s. 4(2).
- Should the confession of a father to the crime of incest be
used as a mitigating factor to prosecute the victim, a minor under the protection and
control of an authority figure who is also the pepetrator of the crime? Even if there was
overwhelming evidence against both the father and the daughter and the fact that the
father admitted to the charges, the Syariah Court must give due consideration to the fact
that the victim is the daughter and a minor.
- Given the reality of present day society where girls begin
menstruation at a much younger age, shouldn't the religious authorities review the
definition of baligh and the assumption of mukallaf to determine
whether a young person can be held responsible for her actions. Even if the daughter in
this case did consent to such an act of incest, society would question the circumstances
of her family life and relationship that could enable such an act to happen. These must be
regarded as mitigating factors.
- Given society's abhorrence of the crime of incest, wouldn't
the best interest of society and the cause of justice be better served if the father was
charged with rape under the Penal Code where he is liable to imprisonment for not less
than five years and not more than 20 years. This sentencing properly reflects the gravity
of the crime committed. However, under the Kelantan Syariah Criminal Code, the person who
commits incest is liable only to a fine not exceeding $3,000 or to imprisonment for a term
not exceeding two years, or both. In this particular case, the Syariah court sentenced the
36-year-old father to a total of two years jail, a $4,000 fine and two strokes of the
rotan when he pleaded guilty to charges of incest and mukaddimah zina (preliminaries to
adultery) with the daughter.
Laws
- Kelantan Enakmen Keterangan Mahkamah Syariah 1991 (Kelantan Evidence Enactment of the
Syariah Court, 1991)
- Enakmen Kanun Jenayah Syariah, tahun 1985, Negeri Kelantan
(Kelantan Syariah Criminal Code Enactment 1985)
- Enakmen Acara Jenayah Syariah No. 9/83, Negeri Kelantan
(Syariah Criminal Procedure Enactment 1983)
- Akta Mahkamah Juvana 1947 (Juvenile Courts Act, 1947)
- Penal Code (FMS Cap 45)
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