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Amnesty International urges Malaysia to quash caning sentence of lesbians

International human rights group calls for an end to ‘the use of caning and repeal the laws that impose these torturous punishments completely’

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Amnesty International calls caning, seen here in Indonesia, cruel and unjust. Photo: EPA
Associated Press
Amnesty International on Wednesday urged Malaysia to quash a caning sentence for a lesbian couple, calling the punishment cruel and unjust.

Two unidentified ethnic Malay women, aged 22 and 32, had pleaded guilty for attempting to have sexual intercourse and were sentenced to six strokes of a cane and fined by a sharia court this month.

The caning in northeast Terengganu state was expected to happen on Tuesday but was postponed to Monday due to technical reasons.

Amnesty’s Malaysian director Gwen Lee welcomed the deferment but said a delay was insufficient.

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“We are pleased that the cruel and unjust punishment that was handed down to these two women did not take place as scheduled,” Lee said. “However, a delay is obviously not enough. Both women must now have their sentences quashed immediately and unconditionally to reverse this injustice once and for all.”

Amnesty urged Malaysia to “end the use of caning and repeal the laws that impose these torturous punishments completely”.

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