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Brunei Implements Stoning To Death For Gay Sex, Adultery

In Brunei, a𓃲dultery and gay sex are now punishable by de♚ath by stoning.

Brunei Implements Stoning To Deatꦺh For Gay Sex, Adultery💯
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Brunei on Wednesday introduced harsh new sharia laws, including death by stoning for adultery and gay sex, despite a storm of global criticism from politicians, celebrities and rights g🧔roups.

The tough penal code in the tiny country on tropical Borneo island -- ruled by the all-powerful Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah --🍰 fully came into force following years of delays.

The laws, which 🐼also include amputation of hands and feet for thieves, make Brunei the first place in East or Southeast Asia to have a sharia penal code at the national lev🌞el, joining several mostly Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia.

Rape and robbery are also punishable by death under the code and many of the new laws, such as capital punishment for insulting the 🧸Prophet Mohammed, apply to non-Muslims as wel♚l as Muslims.

The decision to push ahead with the punishments has sparked alarm around the world, with the United Nations labelling 🔯them "cruel and inhumane" and celebrities, led by actor George Clooney and pꦕop star Elton John, calling for Brunei-owned hotels to be boycotted.

In a public address to mark a special date in the Muslim calendar, the sultan called for stronger Isl𝄹amic teachings but did not mention the new penal code.

"I want to see🍃 Islamic teachings in this country grow stronger," he said in the nationally televised speech at a convention centre near the capital Bandar Seri Begawan.

The sultan, who has been on the throne for over five de𝔉cades,꧋ also insisted that Brunei was a "fair" country and the environment for visitors was "safe and harmonious".

Government of♒ficials later confirmed the laws had entered into force.

The sharia laws have triggered worldwide condemnation, and Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, d🥂escribed the code as "barbaric to the core, imposing archaic punishments for acts that shouldn't even be crimes".

The Euro📖pean Union said in a statement that some of the new punishments "amount to torture, acts of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment".

They are particula♏rly upsetting for the country's small lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community. Before the new laws, sex between men was already illegal in Brunei and punishable with up to 10 years in jail.

But the new code stipulates death by stoning as a punishment for sex between men, while women convicted of having sexual relations with other women face up to 40 strokes of the cane or a maximum 1൩0-year jail term.

A 33-year-old gay Bruneian man, who spoke anonymously, said th✨e new laws were "unfair, cruel and shoul♑d not happen".

"It rꦫeally takes away my happiness and freedom to express myself, and depresses me so much," he told AFP.

Zulhelmi bin Mohamad, a transgender woman who fled Brunei last year and is seeking asylum in Canada, told AFP that the environment will be more terrifying for the country's LGBT community, who were already leadin🔥g "very secretive" lives.

"Some worry a lot and would like to escape the count꧃ry before they are found out not to be... heterosexual,༒" the 19-year-old said.

Confirming the new penal code was now in force, a religious affairs ministry official told AFP: "The statement from the prime minister's office last weekend on (the code's) implementation prevails, hence (April 3) marks the 🌄𝕴date of its implementation."

A second government official, speaking anonymously, confirmed it had entered inꦦto force.

The sultan -- who is one of the world'sꦇ wealthiest mꦜen and lives in a vast, golden-domed palace -- announced plans for the code in 2013.

The first section was introduced in 2014 and included less stringent penalties, such as fines or jail terms for offences including indecent behaviour or skipping Friday 🙈prayers.

Clooney's call to boycott nine Brunei-owned hotels in Europe and the United States last week catapulted the issue into the international headlines.

Since then, a series of well-known figures have lined up to add their names t🍸o the chorus of condemnation.

The sultan, who is the world's second-longest reigning monarch, first called for the pen🌃al code in the late 1990s and it appears to enjoy broad support in the former British protectorate of about 400,000 people.

Analysts say he is seeking to burnish his Islamic credentials and shore up support among the country's conservatives due to the waning fortunes of the oil♛-dependent economy, which has been ravaged by recession in recent years.

It is also unclear whether death by stoning w💃ill actually be implemented, as a high burden of proof is needed to hand down the punishment and Brunei has not executed anyone for d⛦ecades.

(AFP)