KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 16 – An aide to Kelantan deputy mentri besar Datuk Mohd Amar Abdullah said today that a news report claiming the state’s hudud committee is considering introducing the guillotine to punish offenders is inaccurate.
In a statement here, Mohd Amar’s private secretary Mohd Khairil Hazmie Yusof said the reporter for a story carried on Malay news portal MStar Online had been the one who suggested the possibility of introducing the 18th century contraption as a method to punish criminals under the Islamic penal code.
MStar Online is the Malay language news portal of English daily The Star. The same report was also published in English in the newspaper.
“Datuk Mohd Amar said the suggestion can be considered and discussed in the hudud technical committee meeting, after a study is carried out,” Mohd Khairil said.
“Therefore, linking him (Mohd Amar) to the suggestion was the reporter’s mistake,” he added.
The aide also said that Mohd Amar is disappointed with the report as it could create a misunderstanding and tarnish the state government’s image.
In The Star’s report today, Mohd Amar was quoted saying that the Kelantan hudud committee is contemplating introducing a “mini version” of the guillotine, an 18th century contraption used during the French revolution for executions by beheading.
According to the Kelantan PAS leader, with the guillotine, surgeons would no longer be needed to conduct amputations on offenders convicted under the hudud law.
Mohd Amar, who chairs the committee, also reportedly conceded that medical practitioners are averse to the proposal of amputating limbs as it is in contrary to the Hippocratic Oath.
The Hippocratic Oath states, among others, that doctors must never do harm to anyone, and must do what is best for their patients.
“The surgeon must first agree to carry out the procedure but he is likely to face the wrath of the Malaysian Medical Association (MMA) for violating the Hippocratic Oath,” he was quoted saying in the newspaper’s report.
In April, the MMA warned that will seek to disqualify surgeons who perform the unethical amputations on criminals convicted under hudud, reminding doctors that they are bound by their professional ethics to do no harm.
The MMA represents 14,000 out of 37,000 doctors in Malaysia.
In 1993, the PAS state government passed the Kelantan Syariah Criminal Code Enactment II, but the strict Islamic penal code has not been enforced due to conflicts with the Federal Constitution.
The state formed the technical committee after state government announced in April that it is gearing up present two Private Member’s Bills to Parliament, hoping to remove all obstacles to its implementation of the hudud law in Kelantan by 2015.
But PAS is facing unyielding resistance from its Pakatan Rakyat (PR) partners PKR and DAP, and has said it hopes to get the necessary votes from Umno MPs in order to get the bill approved. The Islamist party will need a simple majority of 112 votes for this.
In Islamic jurisprudence, “hudud” covers crimes such as theft, robbery, adultery, rape and sodomy.
Punishments for the crimes are severe, including amputation, flogging and death by stoning.
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