Kuala Lumpur:
Caning in Malaysia has "hit epidemic proportions" with thousands of people subjected every year to beatings which leave permanent physical and mental scars, Amnesty International said on Monday.
The London-based rights group called on the Malaysian government to immediately end the practice of judicial caning, which is meted out for serious crimes including murder and rape and for immigration violations.
"Caning in Malaysia has hit epidemic proportions," said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific director.
"In every case that we examined, the punishment amounted to torture, which is absolutely prohibited under any circumstances."
Amnesty said that since 2002, when parliament made immigration violations subject to caning, tens of thousands of migrant workers and foreigners seeking asylum had undergone the punishment.
"In Malaysian prisons specially trained caning officers tear into victims' bodies with a meter-long cane swung with both hands at high speed," it said.
"The cane rips into the victim's naked skin, pulps the fatty tissue below, and leaves scars that extend to muscle fibre. The pain is so severe that victims often lose consciousness."
Amnesty said that prison officers were paid a bonus for each stroke, enabling them to double their income by administering the punishment.
"Others take bribes to intentionally miss, sparing their victims," it said.
Corporal punishment has become a hot topic in Malaysia, particularly after a a Muslim mother of two was last year sentenced to six strokes and a fine for drinking alcohol.
However, caning for religious offences, ordered by Islamic courts which run in parallel with civil courts in the Muslim-majority country, is much lighter than in the civil justice system.
Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno's sentence for drinking alcohol was eventually reduced to community service but three other women then received between four and six strokes of the cane after being convicted of sex outside marriage.
The penalties triggered uproar among women's activists and human rights advocates.
The London-based rights group called on the Malaysian government to immediately end the practice of judicial caning, which is meted out for serious crimes including murder and rape and for immigration violations.
"Caning in Malaysia has hit epidemic proportions," said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific director.
"In every case that we examined, the punishment amounted to torture, which is absolutely prohibited under any circumstances."
Amnesty said that since 2002, when parliament made immigration violations subject to caning, tens of thousands of migrant workers and foreigners seeking asylum had undergone the punishment.
"In Malaysian prisons specially trained caning officers tear into victims' bodies with a meter-long cane swung with both hands at high speed," it said.
"The cane rips into the victim's naked skin, pulps the fatty tissue below, and leaves scars that extend to muscle fibre. The pain is so severe that victims often lose consciousness."
Amnesty said that prison officers were paid a bonus for each stroke, enabling them to double their income by administering the punishment.
"Others take bribes to intentionally miss, sparing their victims," it said.
Corporal punishment has become a hot topic in Malaysia, particularly after a a Muslim mother of two was last year sentenced to six strokes and a fine for drinking alcohol.
However, caning for religious offences, ordered by Islamic courts which run in parallel with civil courts in the Muslim-majority country, is much lighter than in the civil justice system.
Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno's sentence for drinking alcohol was eventually reduced to community service but three other women then received between four and six strokes of the cane after being convicted of sex outside marriage.
The penalties triggered uproar among women's activists and human rights advocates.
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