Malaysian minister defends caning of prisoners as gruesome video appears on internet

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Malaysian minister defends caning of prisoners as gruesome video appears on internet

By DAVID WILLIAMS
1st August 2007
Daily Mail

Strapped on a wooden frame, a prisoner braces himself for the brutal onslaught.

Within moments of the first blow being struck by the cane-wielding official, the skin on his buttocks breaks and the raw wound begins to open.

Lash after lash after lash follows until his flesh is reduced to a bloody mess. With each blow, the body flinches and there is a cry.



Prepare to suffer: The official raises his cane high in the air to deliver the first blow to the prisoner



The caning was meted out in a jail in Malaysia, where the authorities insist that it is a legitimate punishment.

However, a video of the flogging has caused an outcry after it was posted on the Internet and seen around the world.

In images condemned by Malaysia's own lawyers, the unidentified male prisoner, thought to be a drug dealer, is shown being struck 20 times on his bare buttocks with a rotan - a bamboo-like cane.

The Bar Council of Malaysia, which represents 8,000 lawyers, has called for such punishment to be abolished and stepped up its campaign after highlighting the video images.



Impact: The prisoner is heard crying out in pain on the video, which has angered human rights campaigners



The six-minute clip, entitled Malaysian Caning Judicial Corporal Punishment, was posted on www.lifeleak.com, an international video-sharing site.

"We are against the death penalty and corporal punishment," said council president Ambiga Sreenevasan.

"It's against all international human rights norms and the various conventions on torture. It's inhumane and degrading."


Ouch: the results of the beating



However, deputy internal security minister Fu Ah Kiow defended the punishment. He said the video clip was recorded at a local prison and is used in drug prevention and other anti-crime campaigns.

He would not reveal details of the prisoner involved. But the man was understood to be a drug dealer who received dozens of lashes, as well as a lengthy prison term.

In the video, he is seen being led away after the beating then shown undergoing a medical examination.

The minister added: "The video is a means to educate the public and to show how hideous caning can be. It is a deterrence for drug traffickers and drug addicts.

"Somehow somebody duplicated it and posted it on the website, but it's not done by our officials. It is for education and training purposes, there's no big deal about it."

Flogging is widely used in Malaysia for various offences including drug crimes, rape and illegal entry into the country.


WARNING: THIS VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC SCENES

To see the video, go to this and it is at the end of the article - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/li...ews.html?in_article_id=472442&in_page_id=1811
 

Unforgiven

Force majeure
May 28, 2007
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I saw it. It's brutal. You don't want to watch this video. Maybe you do but it's sickening and nothing more than torture.
 

Niflmir

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Dec 18, 2006
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I suspect he won't traffic drugs again.

At least not before buying a really comfortable doughnut to sit on.

He wouldn't have done it in the first place if he thought he would be caught. Punishments are not effective deterrents, people traffic drugs because there is demand and it does not require much skill, so it is seen as an accessible way to make a lot of money. People certainly don't traffic in drugs because they think the punishments are lenient.
 

Unforgiven

Force majeure
May 28, 2007
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I suspect he won't traffic drugs again.

At least not before buying a really comfortable doughnut to sit on.
If he was even involved in drugs. Malaysia has a bit of a reputation for corrupt police and justice system that use things like a drug charge to elicit money out of tourists and locals they feel might just pay.
 

Just the Facts

House Member
Oct 15, 2004
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He wouldn't have done it in the first place if he thought he would be caught. Punishments are not effective deterrents, people traffic drugs because there is demand and it does not require much skill, so it is seen as an accessible way to make a lot of money. People certainly don't traffic in drugs because they think the punishments are lenient.

Amen to that!
 

RomSpaceKnight

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Oct 30, 2006
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He should count himself lucky he was not in China> he would have been executed for it. Or the US were he would have done 20 years. I'll take the scars on my backside over 20 years of my life or my life itself.