Malaysian religious officers detain transgender for organising 'haram' beauty pageant
Rachel Middleton
Nissa
Katerahong, the winner of the Miss Tiffany's Universe transgender
beauty contest, poses with the two runners up in Pattaya, Thailand
Getty
The religious authorities in Malaysia have stepped into the
spotlight again. This time, its decision to raid a private dinner hosted
at an upscale hotel in Kuala Lumpur for transgender women and detain
its organiser, has come under fire by the transgender community.
The religious authorities are claiming that the dinner hosted a
beauty pageant, which is prohibited under religious laws for Muslim
women.
A 1996 fatwa issued by the National Fatwa Council prohibits Muslim women from joining beauty contests.
The religious edict has been gazetted as law.
The authorities have
detained the organiser of the dinner. This has sparked a strong
statement from transgender rights group, SEED Malaysia which is
demanding that the woman be released immediately.
The NGO's executive
director Yusmar Yusof said that the Malaysian government was duty bound
to protect its citizens irrespective of race, religion, sexual
preference and gender identity. "We hope it will honour its commitment
to the people, abolish laws that violate the rights of the transgender
community and order JAWI (the religious body) to release the organiser
who is still in its custody," he said in a statement.
"We need to band
together to oppose the bully boy tactics by JAWI, other religious
authorities and enforcement officers to hunt down, harass and abuse
trans people," he said.
"The
religious police had no warrant but bulldozed their way through the
close-door fundraising event. This is a clear violation of the rights of
the transgender people and blatant abuse of power by JAWI officers,"
said Yusmar.
He continued: "It has
happened one too many times where the personal choice of gender
identity has led to the transgender community being targeted, bullied,
discriminated, abused and tortured. And it's sad that often these
transgressions are by the state and people in authority."
Lawyer and activist questions legality of raid
Siti Kasim, a lawyer
and activist who was a guest at the dinner said that she and the event
organiser were taken to a police station but she was released while the
latter is still being detained. She told the Malay Mail: "The officer
told me that it's against the law to have a beauty contest - it's haram
in Malaysia, based on a fatwa."
Siti however insisted
that it was not really a beauty pageant as claimed by the authorities.
"It's not a real beauty pageant, it's a show," she said.
She told the media
that about 10 religious officers, came to the hotel at about 10pm local
time and prevented guests from leaving the dinner for about 200
transgender guests. She claimed that the religious authorities did not
have a warrant, nor were they accompanied by police, which is the norm.
Siti then called the
police and only after their arrival were the guests allowed to leave.
However, she and the organiser were taken to the police station. She
questions why the transgender community is deemed to have breached the
law when the religious authorities do not consider them as women.
In 2013, four Muslim
contestants were dropped from the Miss Malaysia World 2013 beauty
pageant following the fatwa. In 1997, the Syariah court in Kuala Lumpur
fined two Muslim contestants of the Miss Malaysia Petite pageant for
violating the fatwa while three other contestants were also taken to
court in Selangor for committing a similar offence.
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