Malaysian Islamic Opposition Plans to Extend Islamic Laws on Non-Muslims
  Associated Press, July 9, 2002
  By Jasbant Singh
  KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia—Fresh from passing laws
  prescribing stoning, whipping and amputation in a state it controls, an
  Islamic fundamentalist party has vowed to impose the harsh penalties across
  Malaysia if it ever takes national power. Abdul Hadi Awang, chief minister of
  Terengganu state and leader of the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, was quoted by
  The Star newspaper Tuesday as saying that the Islamic laws will apply to
  non-Muslims ‘when the time comes."
  The national government, which accuses the fundamentalists of promoting
  extremism, has promised to block such attempts on the state and national
  levels.
  Zahari Mohamad, a senior aide to Abdul Hadi, confirmed the remarks were
  correctly reported. He said the laws would be imposed on non-Muslims if the
  fundamentalist opposition topples Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s moderate
  government in general elections scheduled for 2004.
  "We cannot enforce Islamic laws as the supreme law of the country
  unless federal legislation is amended," Zahari told The Associated Press.
  "We have to form the federal government to be able to do that."
  The controversy comes ahead of by-elections July 18 in another state, Kedah,
  for the state assembly and parliamentary seats of Fadzil Noor, the relative
  moderate fundamentalist leader whose recent death left the party more under
  the control of hardliners like Abdul Hadi.
  Under a bill approved Monday by the Terengganu state legislature, where the
  fundamentalist party controls 28 of 32 seats, a robber who kills his victim
  can be sentenced to death and crucified.
  A thief’s right hand is amputated for his first offense, and his left
  foot for the second. A Muslim who renounces Islam is punished by death. Sodomy
  and adultery are punishable by death by stoning. Muslims who consume alcohol
  can be whipped up to 80 times.
  Mahathir, who has overseen multi-racial Malaysia become one of Asia’s
  richest countries during 21 years in power, has promised that the federal
  government will block the law from being implemented in Terengganu, as is the
  case with the other state the fundamentalists control, Kelantan.
  The fundamentalists acknowledge the laws cannot be enforced, but maintain
  they pass them as a obligation.
  "We are doing what is required by Islam," Zahari said. "Even
  if we lose the elections because of these laws, we don’t mind because we are
  doing our duty."
  Capitalizing on anger over the firing and jailing of Mahathir’s popular
  deputy, Anwar Ibrahim, the fundamentalists made electoral gains in 1999 but
  have been losing popularity amid fears over their plans to establish a
  hardline Islamic state.
  A majority of Malaysia’s 23 million people are ethnic Malay Muslims and
  Islam is the official religion, but there are also large non-Muslim Chinese
  and Indian minorities.
  The Democratic Action Party, which has backing mainly from ethnic Chinese
  and broke an opposition alliance with the fundamentalists earlier this year,
  reacted angrily to Abdul Hadi’s statements.
  "They might as well ask everyone to convert to Islam," said
  spokesman Ronnie Liu. "It is not feasible for a multi-racial country like
  Malaysia to have harsh Islamic laws."
  In Terengganu and Kelantan, the fundamentalists have imposed—but unevenly
  enforced—rules banning gambling outlets and the open sale of alcohol, and
  forced shops to have separate payment counters for men and women. Terengganu
  is considering rules banning bikinis from beaches, though tourism is a pillar
  of the local economy.
  Mahathir, 76, has cast himself as a moderate Muslim leader and won strong
  support from the United States for rounding up scores of suspected militants
  since the Sept. 11 terror attacks, including one who allegedly hosted two of
  the hijackers in 2000.
  
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