Tag: Brunei Darussalam

  • Brunei Is An Islamic Country Practising Islamic Law, Is it Wrong?

    Brunei Is An Islamic Country Practising Islamic Law, Is it Wrong?

    “In your countries you practice freedom of speech, freedom of press, freedom of religion, etc. It’s in your constitution. It’s your political system, your national identity, your rights, your way of life.

    In my country, we practice a Malay, Islamic, Monarchical system and we’re going to start practicing the laws of Islam, Shari’ah Law. Islam is in our constitution, our national identity, our rights, our way of life.

    We may find loopholes in your laws and justice system, and you may have found ours, but this is our country. Just like you practice your right to be gay, etc. for this world you live in now, we practice our rights to be Muslims for this world and the Hereafter.

    This is an Islamic country practising Islamic Law. Why don’t you worry about your kids being gunned down in schools, worry about your prisons being unable to accommodate convicts, worry about your high rate of crimes and DUIs, worry about your high suicide and abortion rate, worry about whatever it is that you should be worried about there.

    Many religions are against homosexuality, it’s nothing new. The moment you hear that Islam and Muslims making a stand and trying to reaffirm their faith, you judge, you boycott, you say that it’s wrong, it’s stupid, it’s barbaric.

    Again, go back to those worries that you should focus on I’ve mentioned earlier. Is it not wrong to legalize deadly weapons, is it not wrong to allow unborn babies to be killed, is it not wrong to allow a lifestyle that results in AIDS and discontinuation of the next generation?

    Why do you care so much what’s happening here in an Islamic nation when you didn’t even bat an eyelid about the Syrians, Bosnians, Rohingyas, Palestinians, etc. Thousands are being killed there and you don’t care, not one is killed here under this Shari’ah Law, and you make a big fuss, even when the citizens here who are directly affected by it, accepts it with peace. Punishments may be harsher but it does not mean it’s easier to be carried out. There are processes to go through before an actual conviction. We are fine with it, we are happy.”

    Government of Brunei Darussalam
    May 2014

    #bruneisyariahlaw #proudtobebruneians #worldstandforbrunei

     

    Source: The Saucy’sside livecook BN

    Rilek1Corner

  • Kenyataan Balas Sultan Brunei Kepada Para Pengkritik Dari Media Barat

    Kenyataan Balas Sultan Brunei Kepada Para Pengkritik Dari Media Barat

    CNN dan media Barat kini sibuk mengancam Brunei disebabkan pelaksanaan Undang-undang Syariah.

    Mereka memboikot semua hotel dan kepentingan Brunei. Berikut adalah jawapan kerajaan Brunei kepada mereka:

    “DALAM negara-negara kamu, kamu mengamalkan kebebasan bersuara, kebebasan media, kebebasan beragama dan lain-lain. Ianya di dalam Perlembagaan kamu, ianya sistem politik kamu, identiti negara kamu, hak kamu, aturan cara hidup kamu.

    “Dalam negara saya, kami mempraktikkan kemelayuan, Islamik, sistem Monarki dan kami akan mula mengamalkan Undang-undang Islam, Undang-undang Syariah. Islam berada di dalam Perlembagaan kami, identiti negara kami, hak kami, aturan cara hidup kami.

    “Kami mungkin menjumpai kelopongan-kelopongan dalam undang-undang dan sistem keadilan kamu dan kamu mungkin menjumpai kelopongan-kelopongan pada kami pula, akan tetapi ini adalah Negara kami.

    “Seperti mana kamu mengamalkan hak kamu untuk Gay dan lain-lain. Kamu lakukannya untuk dunia ini yang kamu diami sekarang, sedang kami mengamalkan hak kami menjadi Muslim untuk dunia ini dan dunia selepasnya. Ini adalah Negara Islam yang mengamalkan Undang-undang Islam.

    “Mengapa tidak kamu risaukan anak-anak kamu yang ditembak di sekolah-sekolah kamu, penjara kamu yang gagal menempatkan orang-orang yang tertuduh, kadar ketinggian jenayah dan DUIs, kadar bunuh diri dan pengguguran yang tinggi dan apa-apa yang patut dirisaukan DI SANA. Banyak agama yang menentang Homoseksualiti, ianya bukan sesuatu yang baru.

    “Saat kamu mendengar bahawa Islam dan Muslim membuat pendirian dan meneguhkan kepercayaan mereka, kamu menghakimi, kamu memboikot, kamu katakan ianya salah, ianya bodoh, ianya kejam. Sekali lagi, pergilah kepada kebimbangan yang kamu patut tumpukan pada yang telah saya beritahu sebelum ini.

    “Tidak salahkah membenarkan senjata-senjata membunuh, tidak salahkah membenarkan bayi yang belum lahir dibunuh, tidak salahkah membenarkan gaya hidup yang membawa pada AIDS dan kerencatan pada generasi baru?

    “Mengapa terlalu risaukan tentang apa yang terjadi di sini, di dalam negara Islam sedang kamu tidak pun membuka mata tentang apa yang berlaku di Syria, Bosnia, Rohingnya, Palestin dan lain-lain. Ribuan terbunuh di sana dan kamu masih tidak peduli, tiada seorang pun yang terbunuh di sini di bawah Undang-undang Syariah dan kamu kecoh menggembar-gemburkan ia, walaupun penduduk di sini yang secara langsung terkesan darinya, menerimanya dengan aman.

    “Hukuman mungkin sedikit keras, tidak bermakna ianya mudah untuk dilaksanakan. Di sana ada proses-proses yang perlu dijalani sebelum boleh disabit bersalah. Kami baik-baik saja dengannya, malah gembira.”


    OLEH | Ke bawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri Baginda Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah Ibni Al-Marhum Sultan Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien Sa’adul Khairi Waddien | SULTAN DAN YANG DIPERTUAN NEGARA BRUNEI DARUSSALAM

  • American Mistress Spills Sexcapades With Sultan of Brunei and His Brother, Broke Sharia Law

    Ahim Rani/Reuters
    Ahim Rani/Reuters
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian_Lauren
    Jill Lauren, the escort for the Sultan of Brunei and his brother. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian_Lauren
    As a teenager, I was the mistress of his brother—who ‘gave’ me as a gift to the sultan. And in just one night, we committed at least two offenses under his newly implemented penal code.

    On Tuesday, I was greeted by a familiar face when I read through the morning’s news: the sultan of Brunei. He looks older now than when I knew him, of course, his face doughier and more careworn.

    When I was still a teenager, I was the mistress of the sultan’s brother, the prince of Brunei. My usual stance is that they weren’t bad guys, really. Just human and impossibly rich. I have often wondered what I would have done in their place, given all the power and money in the world. I’ve never come up with a satisfactory answer.

    Now the sultan is making headlines for implementing Sharia law in Brunei, including a new penal code that includes stoning to death for adultery, cutting off limbs for theft, and flogging for violations such as abortion, alcohol consumption, and homosexuality. There’s also capital punishment for rape and sodomy.

    articles300414-AY-Syariah_Panel_Code_Declaration-017.transformed

    I am no expert in international human rights. My only qualification in commenting on this issue is that one drunken evening in the early ’90s, the sultan and I committed at least two of the aforementioned offenses as we looked down on the lights of Kuala Lumpur from a penthouse suite.

    Let me back up a bit.

    I had barely turned 18 when I found myself at a “casting call” at the Ritz-Carlton in New York for what I was told would be a position at a nightclub in Singapore. When I got the job, I learned that the job wasn’t in Singapore at all. Instead, it was an invitation to be the personal guest of the notorious playboy Prince Jefri Bolkiah, the youngest brother of the sultan of Brunei. At the time, the sultan was the wealthiest man in the world. I was a wild child consumed with wanderlust. I was hardly an innocent, but I was—when I accepted the invitation—very, very young.

    When I arrived in Brunei, I found out that the prince threw lavish parties every night, in a palace with Picassos in the bathrooms and carpets woven through with real gold. At these parties there was drinking (which was not legal in public), dancing, some fairly hilarious karaoke, and, most important, women—about 30 or 40 beauties from all over the world, comprising a harem of sorts.

    The prince was rakish and clever and yes, even charming at times. I spent the next year and some change as his girlfriend. For a time, it was an adventure both glamorous and exciting. It was also lonely and demoralizing, and full of constant low-grade humiliations, including being given to the prince’s brother as a gift (see: the Kuala Lumpur hotel suite). Although I was by no means a prisoner, I wasn’t free to come and go as I pleased. By the end of my time there, I felt 10 years older and still not wise enough. It took me a long time to regain my footing, though I did find my way eventually. My struggles were internal and they were my own. In this context, they were a privilege.

    Stoning is practiced or authorized by law in 15 countries now. It is disproportionally applied as a punishment for women, often as a penalty for adultery. Human rights groups, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, consider it cruel and unusual punishment and torture. According to the international rights organization Women Living Under Muslim Law, stoning “is one of the most brutal forms of violence perpetrated against women in order to control and punish their sexuality and basic freedoms.”

    And yet it is the privilege of the prince and the sultan to misbehave. The picaresque escapades and legendary extravagances of the brothers are indulged with a collective wink. For everyone else residing within Brunei’s borders, Muslim and non-Muslim alike, freedoms are curtailed, and those limitations now are potentially enforced by brutal violence.

    Cast stones at me if you will for my past improprieties—plenty have. Of course, those stones will be metaphorical. As the citizen of a free society, it is my right to transgress, as long as I don’t break any laws or impinge on the freedom of others. It’s my prerogative to sleep with all the princes I damn well feel like. I live with my choices.

    As the citizens of Brunei face the erosion of their rights, I imagine the man I once knew, holed up in a posh hotel suite somewhere, maybe with another American teenager in his lap, making laws that legislate morality.

    Authored by Jill Lauren*

    *Jillian Lauren is the author of The New York Times bestseller Some Girls: My Life in a Harem. 

     

     

  • Brunei Prohibits Non-Muslims to Use 19 Islamic words

     

    WORDS such as “Allah“, “mu’min” (believer) and “masjid” (mosque) cannot be used with regards to another religion besides Islam, said a senior syariah officer yesterday.

    Under the Syariah Penal Code Order, there are 19 words which cannot be used with respect to other religions.

    They are azanbaitullahAl QuranAllahfatwaFirman AllahhadithHajihukum syara’ilahi;Ka’bahkalimah al syahadahkiblatmasjidimammuftimu’minsolat; and wali.

    Hj Hardifadhillah Hj Mohd Salleh, a senior syariah legal officer of the Islamic Legal Unit, yesterday briefed staff of the Ministry of Industry and Primary Resources (MIPR) on key parts of the Order, which will take effect this April.

    Speaking to more than 200 people, the legal officer gave some examples of offences that can apply to non-Muslims such as zina (adultery) with a Muslim partner, drinking alcohol in a public place, andkhalwat (close proximity) with a Muslim partner.

    Khalwat is defined in the Order as a non-married couple who are “living together; cohabiting; in confinement; or isolating oneself in close proximity that can lead to suspicion that they are committing an immoral act.”

    If convicted, the penalty is a fine of up to $4,000 and/or one year in prison.

    For adultery between a married Muslim and a married non-Muslim, both parties can be punished by stoning to death if the offence is proved by confession, or the testimony of four eyewitnesses.

    Hj Hardifadhillah added that any person who instigates any Muslim man or woman to divorce, or neglect their duties towards their partner, can be fined up to $4,000 and/or jailed for a year.

    Additionally, any Muslim parent who surrenders his child into the care of a non-Muslim can be fined up to $20,000 and/or jailed for up to five years.

    Brunei will enforce the Syariah Penal Code Order in three phases.

    Present at the briefing was MIPR Minister Yang Berhormat Pehin Orang Kaya Seri Utama Dato Seri Setia Hj Yahya Begawan Mudim Dato Paduka Hj Bakar and other senior officials from the ministry.

    The briefing was conducted by officials from the Ministry of Religious Affairs, Prime Minister’s Office, Attorney General’s Chambers, and Islamic Da’wah Centre yesterday.

    Source: The Brunei Times

  • Orang Malaysia bengang tentera SG berlatih di Brunei

    Malay_sergeant_of_the_Singapore_Army_and_his_father_-_20120418

    brunei-military-farewell

    images

    Negara Singapura tiada hutan belantara, jika tiada hutan belantara maka tidak perlu sangat lah melatih tentera nya didalam hutan. Tambahan apa yang patut dibuat ada lah melatih tentera nya mempertahan kota Singa itu pada urban warfare sahaja kerana mempertahan kan kota Singapura dari serangan musuh.

    Tetapi semua nya itu jika mereka mahu terhad kan kepada mempertahan kan diri.

    Bagaimana pula jika ada niat  lebih dari itu? Jika mereka mahu masuk kedalam hutan dan berperang gerila dalam hutan, hutan mana pula sasaran mereka?

    Kebetulan negara berhutan terletak tidak jauh dari pulau Singapura, hanya beberapa kilometer sahaja dari pulau Singa itu.Tapi apa pun kita berperasangka baik.

    Singapura menghantar tentera nya berlatih mengenali hutan dan berperang didalam nya dengan menguna kan kemudahan hutan negara Brunei Darussalam.

    Selain mengikat mata wang (pegged) bersama Negara Brunei , Singapura juga dibenarkan berlatih perang dalam hutan dinegara Brunei Darussalam.

    Bukan sahaja tentera Singapura dilatih cara survival didalam hutan malah juga taktikal dan tatacara perang secara total.

    ‘Singapore and Brunei share a strong and long-standing defence relationship. In addition to regular training which SAF troops conduct in Brunei, both defence establishments conduct a wide range of bilateral exercises and professional exchanges which have enhanced the professionalism and strengthened the ties between the two armed forces.’

    Mungkin menyedari bukan sahaja pertahanan yang kuat mesti ada pada kota kecil ini, maka mereka go one step further dengan memperolehi kemahiran berperang dalam hutan. Dan kebetulan keakraban dengan negara Brunei sudah terjalin maka peluang menggunakan hutan nya sebagai kawasan latihan tentera perlu diambil.

    Kerana kurang kemahiran dalam hutan maka latihan diada kan secara serious, malah sehingga beberapa kali tentera nya hilang dan sesat didalam hutan Brunei itu.

    Latihan boleh di kata kan serious dan penuh kesungguhan sehingga melibat kan nyawa tentera nya.

    “Lance Corporal (LCpl) Muhammad Fahrurrazi Salim was the coxswain in a convoy of four boats used to support the water crossing segment of the jungle training exercise at Sungai Batu Apoi. In a statement released on their website, Singapore’s Defence Ministry said the 20-year-old was last seen wearing a life jacket on his boat at 7.55am Sunday morning. However at 8am, his boat was noticed not to have followed the convoy”

    Bagi negara kita Malaysia , kita hanya mahu berfikir jika hanya mahu mempertahan kan negara sendiri, Singapura sudah pun kuat dan mantap kerana kapal perang Amerika yang berada di sekitar Laut China Selatan juga ada dan akan segera berada di sisi Singapura apabbila sahaja mereka di perlukan.

    Tetapi berperang dalam hutan?

    Itu harus kita waspada kerana Singapura tidak ada hutan yang besar, budak pengakap pun boleh survive dalam hutan mereka, tapi dengan kesungguhan mereka menghantar tentera nya di Brunei untuk berlatih perang, maka Malaysia harus berjaga jaga dengan tindakan “behind enemy line” dari pihak jiran kita.

    Banyak fakta nyata dan mudah di perolehi berkenaan tindak tanduk ketenteraan Singapura yang ada di alam maya.

    Singapore also maintains a training establishment in Brunei, known as the Jalan Aman Camp and operates support helicopters mainly to transport the soldiers to Lakiun Camp in Temburong for Jungle Training. The other Singapore military establishment in Brunei is the Lakiun Camp in Temburong. This provides jungle training for the Singapore Armed Forces in the interior of Temburong.

    Kerja kita tidak lebih selain memerhatikan sahaja.

    Malaysian Blogger The Chulan

    Source: http://bit.ly/1beCU1F

deneme bonusu