The Borneo Post

Federal Court to hear appeal in ‘Abdullah’ case

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PUTRAJAYA: The Federal Court has fixed Feb 7 next year to hear the appeal by the National Registrati­on Department ( NRD) and two others against a ruling that a Muslim child conceived out of wedlock can bear his or her father’s surname instead of ‘Abdullah’.

Federal Court deputy registrar Syahrin Jeli Bohari set the hearing date for the appeal when the matter came up before her for case management yesterday.

Present at the proceeding were senior federal counsel Aida Nurdiana Che Kamarulzam­an, representi­ng the NRD, its directorge­neral and the Government of Malaysia, while lawyer Haziq Othman appeared for the Johor Islamic Religious Council and lawyer Kiattilin Sommat, representi­ng the parents and the child.

The parties in the case were also instructed to file their respective submission­s two weeks before the hearing.

On Sept 8, the Federal Court granted the NRD and two others leave to appeal against the appellate court’s decision that a Muslim child conceived out of a wedlock can have the father’s surname instead of ‘Abdullah’.

Three legal questions were posed for determinat­ion by the Federal Court.

On May 25, this year the Court of Appeal allowed the appeal brought by the couple and their child who filed a judicial review to compel the NRD director- general to replace the child’s surname ‘Abdullah’ with the name of the child’s father in the birth certificat­e.

The Court of Appeal, in a written judgment released on July 25 this year, said the NRD director-general was not bound by the ‘fatwa’ or religious edict issued by the National Fatwa Committee to decide the surname of a Muslim child conceived out of wedlock.

In the judgment, the court said the director-general’s jurisdicti­on was a civil one and was confined to determinin­g whether the child’s parents had fulfilled the requiremen­ts under the Births and Deaths Registrati­on Act 1957 ( BDRA), which covers all illegitima­te children, Muslim and non-Muslim.

The court had held that a fatwa had no force of law and could not form the legal basis for the NRD director- general to decide on the surname of an illegitima­te child under Section 13A (2) of the BDRA. — Bernama

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