Parliament and so now Hudud Sharia law in
enforced in Parliament. Numb skulls, that is what happen when you hire monkeys
to guard the Parliament
Who you talking about me. I am more smarter than your monkeys at your parliament
Lawyer tells off Parliament security guards turned
moral police
| April 7, 2017
After a tongue lashing, they allow
entry to NGO representative and lawyer dressed in knee-length skirt she uses to
attend court.
PETALING JAYA: Security personnel at
the Parliament entrance today let a woman through after being sharply rebuked
for harassment when they tried to bar her from entering because her outfit was
considered “indecent”.
Women’s Aid Organisation assistant
treasurer Meera Samanther was told her knee-length skirt, which she usually
wears to attend court hearings, was too short when she tried to enter the
premises.
Meera, who spoke to The Star, was
both stunned and incensed by the moral policing.
“I lost my cool. So I raised my
voice and told him (guard) to stop harassing me.”
Surprised and confused, the security
man let her stride past.
Meera, a lawyer, said a colleague of
hers was similarly harassed by Parliament security personnel when she drove to
the guardhouse for a security pass.
“The security person even peeked
into the car to see what she was wearing and told her to get down so they could
see the length of the skirt.
“This is unacceptable.”
She said security personnel should
focus on actual security threats instead of trying to impose their morals on
visitors.
Parliament corporate communications
head Tengku Nasaruddin Tengku Mohamed said the incident was being investigated.
“Parliament will issue an official
statement soon.”
There have been numerous reports of
government servants at public departments, including even the airport, turning
moral police and refusing entry or service to women they considered
inappropriately dressed.
The subject had been raised even in
Parliament by ministers who wished to know if there was a “moral dress code”
for visitors to government premises.
Minister in Prime Minister’s
Department Azalina Othman Said had said that Putrajaya did not enforce a dress
code on visitors and would entertain all, even those who were dressed
“inappropriately”.
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