Montreal Gazette

‘Naked’ Canadians locked up awaiting inquiry

- SARAH BOESVELD National Post with files from The Associated Press and The Daily Telegraph

Two Saskatchew­an siblings detained in Malaysia must wait as authoritie­s spend four days investigat­ing their alleged crime of obscenity: posing naked for a photo on the peak of the sacred Mount Kinabalu and angering its spirit guardians into triggering an earthquake that killed 18 mountainee­rs.

On Wednesday, video surfaced of four in the group of 10 young backpacker­s exiting a police station in Sabah, donning purple jumpsuits and shielding their faces from the cameras. Investigat­ing officer Asp Japri Abdul Halim told reporters the westerners would be held in central lockup in nearby Kepayan until Saturday, when the Native Courts will decide whether charges are warranted. The back packers could face up to three months in a Malaysian prison.

A friend who was backpackin­g with Lindsey and Danielle Petersen two days before they departed for Malaysia says his smalltown Saskatchew­an friends were “sensible” travellers who would never knowingly offend a local custom or cause any kind of disturbanc­e. He said that, from the photos his friends posted online from the shoot atop Mount Kinabalu, there was no flagrant nudity on the part of the Petersens.

“I do believe they’ve not committed any offence in what they’ve done. They didn’t knowingly offend the group of people,” Phillip Gourley told the National Post from Taiwan. “Obviously the disaster that happened, the earthquake is extremely unfortunat­e, but if that is believed locally to be the cause of the earthquake that’s not something Lindsey or Danielle would have known about.”

He first met the Petersens at a hostel in Lombok, Indonesia, where they shared a room and then travelled for a week and a half to Bali, scuba diving, and taking in the sights. Lindsey and Danielle were excited to get to their next destinatio­n: the Malaysian island of Borneo, to do their very first mountain trek.

Gourley describes them as “really well behaved” — miles apart from the image being beamed out in the media. “They were super funny but they weren’t necessaril­y ones to go streaking,” he said.

The Petersens shared their experience of the mountain trek on Facebook shortly thereafter, and mentioned taking a photo on the 4,095-metre peak — the highest between the Himalayas and New Guinea. But the photo they posted, Gourley said, would have caused “zero offence.”

It showed the group of 10, having just hiked up the mountain in 30 C heat, wearing only their underwear. Their backs were to the camera and their hands thrown up in celebratio­n for having conquered the climb. “It was a completely sensible photograph, nothing indecent.”

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