MALAYSIA:  Illegal Migrant Workers May Escape the Cane
By Anil Netto
PENANG, Mar 20  (IPS) - With the Malaysian Bar calling for the abolition of  corporal punishment ‘illegal' migrant workers, who are currently being  rounded up in a nationwide sweep, may become the first beneficiaries of  any change in policy. 
At the weekend annual general meeting of the Bar, which comprises 12,000  lawyers in the country, a motion calling for the declaration of whipping  as cruel, inhumane and degrading was unanimously adopted. The bar pushed  for the abolition of the whipping sentence in various laws, including the  Immigration Act.
The two lawyers, Latheefa Koya and Renuka T. Balasubramaniam, who moved  the motion asked the Bar to lead public opinion in ‘‘rejecting and  denouncing the sentence of whipping as it is anachronistic and  inconsistent with a compassionate society in a developed nation''.
They also pointed out that whipping had failed as a deterrent and asserted  that it is time for Malaysia to subscribe to Article 5 of the Universal  Declaration of Human Rights, which states that no one should be subjected  to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
‘‘We are putting forward this motion now because of the increasing numbers  of arrests and (cases of) whipping going on now,'' Latheefa Koya told IPS,  pointing to the mass raids currently going on to pick up ‘illegal'  migrants.  ‘‘This motion is a step forward in getting rid of corporal  punishment altogether.''
Corporal punishment -- whipping with a thick rattan cane -- is usually  administered as a supplementary penalty for a range of crimes including  armed robbery and drug trafficking. But in recent times, it has also been  used on migrants deemed to be illegal under the Immigration Act. Those in  breach of the Act face fines, jail terms and whipping.
In practice, migrants, including refugees, picked up during raids are  either brought to court -- within two weeks -- or sent straight to  immigration detention centres for eventual deportation.
Of those brought to court, those with valid documents but who have  overstayed face prison terms and deportation. A caning sentence, usually  two to three strokes, in addition to a stint in prison, is meted out to  those without any documents, according to Latheefa, who works in Legal  Aid. Women are not whipped.
Upon being brought to court, migrants often do not know what charges are  brought against them, the two lawyers claim. ‘‘They are not informed of  their right to legal representation, and in any event, are not provided  with a reasonable opportunity to seek help. The lack of interpretation in  appropriate languages renders the whole legal process a complete travesty  of justice and human rights.''
Faced with indefinite detention, many of them turn in guilty pleas without  realising the full implications.
In the past, rights groups have spoken out against whipping, which leaves  large red welts and permanent scars on the buttocks. Rather than having  any Islamic connotations, judicial corporal punishment here was first  introduced in the late 19th century by British colonial administrators as  an outgrowth of British judicial custom and practice at the time.
In their motion, Latheefa and Renuka pointed out that ‘‘whipping is  clearly intended to be a humiliating experience.'' They cited New  Zealander Aaron Cohen's description of the six strokes he received in 1982  for drug-trafficking:
‘‘It's just incredible pain. More like a burning - like someone sticking  an iron on your bum. That's the sort of feeling. Pain - just ultimate  pain,'' he said. ‘‘The strokes come at a rate of one a minute - but it  seemed like a lifetime to me. I waited and waited for the first one and as  soon as I let my breath out - ‘baam'. Afterwards my bum looked like a side  of beef.''
Upon serving their sentences, "illegal'' migrants are sent to immigration  holding centres for deportation.
In the past, Amnesty International has expressed grave concern over  conditions for undocumented migrants held in immigration detention  centres, ‘‘especially when mass arrests and deportations lead to severe  overcrowding. Conditions in some immigration detention centres may be at  times so poor as to amount to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment''.
The two lawyers' motion could face some resistance from other lawyers and  ordinary Malaysians as migrant workers have often received negative  coverage in the media. Many Malaysians are worried about the incidence of  serious crime. Others link the rising crime rate with the high number of  migrants, estimated to number close to 10 per cent of the population, even  though statistics reveal that they are not more prone to crime.
The country's top police officer was reported as saying last month that  only 2 per cent of crimes in the country were committed by foreigners.  However, he proposed that all foreign workers be confined to their  quarters and have their movements monitored by management to prevent them  from committing crimes.
Despite the inuman conditions, Malaysia's relative prosperity has  continued to attract  thousands of illegal or undocumented workers from  such neighbouring countries as Indonesia, Burma, India, the Philippines  and Bangladesh where job opportunities are scarce.
For Irene Fernandez, director of the leading migrant rights groups  Tenaganita, the lawyers' motion calling for an end to whipping is  extremely important. ‘‘For us, it is like a tool for torture. It is a very  inhuman thing to do,'' she told IPS.
The impact of whipping, she added, was tremendous and left migrant workers  scarred for life. ‘‘Whipping should become history. As a nation now  celebrating its 50th year of independence, whipping should be out, and not  condoned anymore.''  (END/2007)
MADPET is for the Abolition of Death Penalty, an end of torture and abuse of rights by the police, an end to death in custody, an end to police shoot to kill incidents, for greater safeguards to ensure a fair trial, for a right to one phone call and immediate access to a lawyer upon arrest, for the repeal of all laws that allow for detention without trial and an immediate release of all those who are under such draconian laws.
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