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| Brunei's Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah delivers a speech during the official ceremony of the implementation of Sharia Law in Bandar Seri Begawan on April 30, 2014. (AFP) |
A
controversial new penal code for oil-rich Brunei that will eventually include
tough Islamic sharia penalties such as severing of limbs and death by stoning
was due to officially come into effect on Thursday.
Brunei's
all-powerful Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah had announced on Wednesday that he would
push ahead with the introduction of the new criminal code that has sparked rare
domestic criticism of the fabulously wealthy ruler and international
condemnation.
The initial
phase beginning Thursday introduces fines or jail terms for offences including
indecent behaviour, failure to attend Friday prayers, and out-of-wedlock
pregnancies.
There were
no known events to mark Thursday's implementation.
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File photo
of people sitting outside the Sultan
Omar Saifuddeen mosque in Bandar Seri
Begawan (AFP)
|
Late next
year, punishments such as death by stoning for offences including sodomy and
adultery will be introduced.
The sultan
-- one of the world's wealthiest men -- had announced the implementation last
year.
He first
called for the penal code in the late 1990s and has increasingly voiced plans
to strengthen Islam's role in the already conservative, energy-rich Muslim
country on Borneo island.
But the
plans by the revered father-figure monarch triggered unprecedented criticism
earlier this year on Brunei's active social media, though the move appears to
enjoy broad support, especially among Muslim ethnic Malays, who make up about
70 percent of the population.
The UN's
human rights office and various international rights and legal activist groups
also have condemned the move as out of step with modern society.
Brunei is
the first country in East or Southeast Asia to introduce a sharia penal code on
a national level, joining several mostly Middle Eastern countries like Saudi
Arabia and Iran.
Attorney
General Hayati Salleh late on Wednesday sought to ease concerns over the code's
implementation, stressing that sharia cases will face high burdens of proof
before the tough penalties are imposed.
"It is
crucial that we, and the international community, understand these distinctions
and not focus solely on the punishments but rather, on the evidence-gathering
process that is complicated and strict," she said.
The
monarch's wealth -- estimated three years ago at $20 billion by Forbes magazine
-- is legendary with reports of a vast collection of luxury vehicles and huge,
gold-bedecked palaces.
The
monarchy was deeply embarrassed by a sensational family feud between Hassanal
and his younger brother Jefri Bolkiah over the latter's alleged embezzlement of
$15 billion during his tenure as finance minister in the 1990s.
Court
battles and investigations revealed salacious details of Jefri's un-Islamic
jet-set lifestyle, including allegations of a high-priced harem of Western
women and a luxury yacht he owned called "Tits".


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