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|   Why did the police do what they did? Posted: 14 Jul 2011 03:38 PM PDT 
 The detainees had their hands "cuffed" and looked pretty much subdued. However, as they were led through the line, they were kicked and punched by the police. Zan Azlee, The Malaysian Insider The tough policeman with the huge muscles grabbed me by my shoulders and flung me towards the sidewalk not caring that I had a press tag around my neck. I struggled to keep my balance and not drop my camera. I barely managed to not trip over the curb. "Halau cameraman itu! (Get rid of that cameraman!)" screamed the policeman's other colleagues. My crime? I was shooting a bunch of arrested demonstrators being led out of Tung Shin Hospital and through a police line. The detainees had their hands "cuffed" and looked pretty much subdued. However, as they were led through the line, they were kicked and punched by the police. I was on assignment for The Malaysian Insider to gather video footage of the Bersih rally in Kuala Lumpur on July 9. But I couldn't get enough footage of that incident since I ended up behind police lines along with other members of the media, cordoned off from what was happening. There were many instances on the day when demonstrators were being arrested and people around would start yelling for the media to come document it. "Media! Cepat! Polis tengah tahan orang! (Media! Hurry up! The police are arresting people!)" they would scream. Many of them wanted visual proof that the police were being overly-aggressive when it came to arresting peaceful demonstrators. Many also realised that if the media was around during the arrests, the police were less likely to use excessive force. To me, that is just proof that a free and balanced media is a very important component to keep the wheel of democracy spinning smoothly. But, of course, keeping things going smoothly can be close to impossible while being under such tense situations. In the morning, before the demonstrators arrived in the city, the situation was very calm even though there were police everywhere. The media, myself included, were free to roam around, taking pictures and video of the police all ready to face the day. When the demonstrators started arriving, things got a bit tense. However, as far as my observations went, the tension did not arise from the demonstrators. They were just marching and chanting for free elections. It was when the crowd got big (around 10,000 of them) that trouble started in front of Menara Maybank. The trouble definitely did not start with the demonstrators. They didn't approach the police. It was the police who came in firing tear gas and chemically-laced water. The demonstrators were pushed back towards Jalan Pudu and that's when all the aggressive arrests started happening. At this point, the media were allowed free movement, even though we were screamed at to move away by the police. But we were not physically man-handled. It was only after the second wave of tear gas attacks that the police started to control the media by cordoning them off behind police lines. 
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|   Malaysia in the Era of Globalization #73 Posted: 14 Jul 2011 01:19 AM PDT Shari'a literally means, "the road to the watering hole," the right or straight path to be followed. To Muslims, Shari'a refers to the body of Islamic laws that are perceived as being part and parcel of the faith. It thus assumes the same rightful place as the Quran and sunnah. To criticize the Shari'a is to criticize the faith itself. And therein lies the problem. M. Bakri Musa Chapter 9:  Islam in Malay Life  Shari'a in a Plural Society  The  issue of the Islamic state is needlessly consuming the energy of many  Malaysians, Muslims and non-Muslims alike. It is also the platform of  the Islamic Party (PAS), its reason for being. Yet when challenged on  the specifics, PAS is sorely unprepared. Surely after championing the  issue for the past half a century, its leaders should have a pretty  clear idea of their goals. If by Islamic state they mean one based on  the ideals of justice and morality of the Quran, then all Muslims and  many non-Muslims would agree. But if they want a state based on the  Shari'a (Islamic law) in its current form, many Muslims and certainly  all non-Muslims would demur. The  Shari'a took three centuries to formulate and consumed the best  intellectual talent of the Muslim world at the time. Although based on  the Qur'an and sunnah (ways of the prophet), the Shari'a  remains the creation of mortals and as such, carries all the  imperfections implicit in such endeavors. For Muslims to ascribe to it  the reverence and perfection reserved only for the Quran means that we  ascribe those very same qualities to the mortals who crafted the  Shari'a.  Shari'a literally means,  "the road to the watering hole," the right or straight path to be  followed. To Muslims, Shari'a refers to the body of Islamic laws that  are perceived as being part and parcel of the faith. It thus assumes  the same rightful place as the Quran and sunnah. To criticize the Shari'a is to criticize the faith itself. And therein lies the problem.  There are over 6,000 verses in the Quran; of these less than 600 are  concerned with the law. And most of those cover such matters as prayers  and rituals. Only about 80 verses deal with such traditional legal  matters as crime and punishment, contracts, and family law. Clearly the  Quran is not a legal tome but a general guidance on how to build a  moral and ethical society.  It is a  magnificent tribute to the intellect of those early Muslim scholars that  they were able to fashion out of the Quran and the sunnah a  coherent and consistent body of laws that is the Shari'a. In its time  the Shari'a represented a giant leap in intellectual, social, and legal  achievements. Its treatment of women in particular was light years  ahead of its time. The status of women accorded by the Shari'a was of  the order of magnitude a thousand times better than the prevailing  practices. Then women were not even recognized as humans. Whereas  women are granted a share of the inheritance in the Shari'a, in the then  prevailing culture, women were the inheritance. They were  chattels and properties of their husband, to be passed on or traded  accordingly. The Shari'a represented a grand emancipation of women. In  this regard Islam was centuries ahead of Western civilization. The  codifying of divorces too was truly an inspiration, considering that the  concept did not even exist then. Wives were not divorced then; they  were simply discarded, traded, or handed over to their husband's heir. The Shari'a's treatment of criminal justice was similarly light years  ahead of the prevailing ethos of "an eye for an eye;" likewise the  treatment of slavery and indentured labor.  While the Shari'a represented a quantum leap in achievement of early  Islam, in its present form it is clearly incompatible with many of  today's universally accepted norms, in particular with respect to human  rights, criminal justice, public law, gender equality, and hosts of  other areas.  I do not say this  lightly seeing that to many Muslims, any criticism of the Shari'a is  blasphemous. But I cannot look at my daughter and tell her that she is  worth only half that of my son, as the Shari'a would have it. I love  all my children equally and my inheritance to them should and will  reflect that sentiment. Nor do I find such cruel and inhuman  punishments as stoning to death a woman for adultery and the chopping of  hands for thievery compatible with an All Compassionate and All  Merciful Allah. Similarly I find the death penalty for apostasy as  prescribed by the Shari'a not only abhorrent but also incompatible with  the Koranic admonition that there shall be no compulsion in matters of  faith.  As a Muslim I take the Koran  to be Allah's revelation. Its message is infallible and immutable, and  for all mankind at all times. That is a matter of faith. Being Allah's  words, the Koran takes precedence over everything else, including the  Shari'a and the sunnah.  That is a heavy statement. Having said it, a much-needed pause for  clarification. Muslims consider the Koran and the sunnah as  co-equal parts of the faith. One cannot separate the message (the  Koran) from the messenger (the prophet – pbuh); they both form an  integral part of the faith. I agree wholeheartedly. The main issue I  have is differentiating between the actual practices and sayings of the prophet (pbuh) and what scholars say they are. I will revisit this important differentiation a few pages hence. Meanwhile back to my original discussion.  Societies change, and so too must the laws. There is nothing in the  Shari'a that mandates we give it the reverence due only to the Quran. Thus the pertinent question, and one rarely asked, is not whether the  Shari'a should be applied to modern society, rather how can we adapt and  modify it to meet current needs. A body of laws that was an  enlightened piece of legislation for 7-10th Century Arabia is  clearly not suitable for the present. When the Shari'a was formulated,  the Arabian society was just emerging from the Age of Jahiliyah (Ignorance),  a period of rampant female infanticide, slavery, and tribalism. A  millennium later, the problems are of a different order. The challenge  today is to enhance the freedom and dignity of humans. That these  freedoms and rights are emphasized by Western civilization is no reason  for Muslims not to co-opt and adopt them.  Today's Muslims should emulate our illustrious predecessors. Had  ancient Muslims been like their present-day counterparts and considered  everything originating outside of Islam as "un-Islamic," Islam would not  have expanded. Muslims today should be equally receptive to and be  welcoming of new ideas and innovations regardless of where they  originated. That Allah chose a Christian to reveal His secret on  gravity, a Jew on the nature of the atom, a Confucian on the explosive  power of gunpowder, and a Hindu on the concept of zero, is not for us to  question. It is however, for us to appreciate that such wisdom and  insights are for the benefit of all.  Next:   Reform in Islam 
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