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Title: | Reforming the Maldivian penal code with reference to punishment of imprisonment |
Authors: | މުޙައްމަދު ޢައްފާން ޝާފީ Shaafy, Mohamed Affan |
Issue Date: | 2020 |
Publisher: | Ahmad Ibrahim Kulliyyah of Laws International Islamic University Malaysia |
Citation: | "Shafy, M.A. (2020). Reforming the Maldivian penal code with reference to punishment of imprisonment (Dissertation, Ahmad Ibrahim Kulliyyah of Laws International Islamic University Malaysia. retrieved from Saruna.mnu.edu.mv" |
Abstract: | The purpose of this thesis is to identify issues related to the use of imprisonment as a
general form of punishment in the Penal Code of Maldives and to propose areas of
reforms to the punishment of imprisonment to Maldives. In this study two main areas
for reform were identified; firstly, since Maldives is a 100% Islamic country, the
philosophies, aims, purposes of punishment and punishment of imprisonment were
identified from Islamic Shari’ah. Since confirmation to the tenets of Islam is a
requirement for all laws in Maldives by its constitution a Shari’ah punishment
benchmark was derived under Article 10 of the Constitution of Maldives 2008. It was
established that Shari’ah punishments were of 3 main types in Islamic criminal law,
these are hudud (fixed), qisas (retaliatory) and ta’zir (discretionary) punishments. To
suggest Shari’ah reforms to the Maldivian Penal Code, Islamic penal systems from
Brunei Darussalam and Malaysia were analyzed. Secondly, for the reduction of meting
imprisonment as a general form of punishment, different types of alternative
punishment forms and application of penal laws were identified from the Nordic region
where the penal systems in the Nordic region seldom used imprisonment unless for
major crimes; and even in the instances of imprisonment, the punishment is focused on
reforming the offender. The Nordic penal punishment model was found to be more
compliant with the punishment philosophy of Shari’ah. This research identified that
Maldivian Penal Code 9/2014 had imprisonment as a primary punishment form for all
types of offences and an unrestricted discretion on punishment was given to judges. It
was also found in this study that Maldivian prisons were not suitable to keep prisoners
as they are not operated in accordance with laws of Maldives, Shari’ah punishment
objectives and international human rights conventions and treaties. To identify areas of
punishment reform all the 160 offenses mentioned in the Penal Code of Maldives
9/2014 were analyzed under the Shari’ah benchmark, it was found that offences that are
applicable under hudud or qisas categories were allocated imprisonment sentences. In
order for the penal laws of Maldives to comply with the Shari’ah benchmark whilst
reducing imprisonment as a general form of punishment and introducing alternative
punishment forms, it was recognised in this research that Maldives would have to follow
a mixed model of a codified Islamisation model in terms of hudud and qisas
punishments and a harmonization reformation model in terms of reforms on alternative
forms of punishments under ta’zir. The findings of this study will help stakeholders in
reforming Maldivian Penal Code with reference to the punishment of imprisonment to
be compliant with the Shari’ah, Constitution of Maldives and international best practice |
URI: | http://saruna.mnu.edu.mv/jspui/handle/123456789/14362 |
Appears in Collections: | އެމް.އެން.ޔޫގެ ދަސްވެނީން ފިޔަވައި އެހެނިހެން ދިވެހީންގެ ޑިޒަރޓޭޝަންތައް Dissertations by other Maldivians
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