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Child Act 2001

Child Act 2001
MalaysianParliament.jpg
Parliament of Malaysia
An Act to consolidate and amend the laws relating to the care, protection and rehabilitation of children and to provide for matters connected therewith and incidental thereto.
Citation Act 611
Territorial extent Throughout Malaysia
Enacted by Dewan Rakyat
Date passed 17 October 2000
Enacted by Dewan Negara
Date passed 18 December 2000
Date of Royal Assent 15 February 2001
Date commenced 1 March 2001
Date effective 1 August 2002, P.U. (B) 229/2002
Legislative history
Bill introduced in the Dewan Rakyat Child Bill 2000
Bill citation D.R. 27/2000
Introduced by Siti Zaharah Sulaiman, Minister of National Unity and Community Development
First reading 17 July 2000
Second reading 16 October 2000
Third reading 17 October 2000
Bill introduced in the Dewan Negara Child Bill 2000
Bill citation D.R. 27/2000
Introduced by S. Veerasingam, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of National Unity and Community Development
First reading 6 December 2000
Second reading 18 December 2000
Third reading 18 December 2000
Amendments
Child (Modification) Order 2003 [P.U. (A) 7/2003]
Related legislation
United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
Juvenile Courts Act 1947 [Act 90]
Women and Girls Protection Act 1973 [Act 106]
Child Protection Act 1991 [Act 468]
Keywords
Child protection, child development
Status: In force

The Child Act 2001 (Malay: Akta Kanak-Kanak 2001) is a Malaysian law which served to consolidate the Juvenile Courts Act 1947 [Act 90], the Women and Girls Protection Act 1973 [Act 106], and the Child Protection Act 1991 [Act 468]. It was enacted partially in order to fulfill Malaysia's obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. However, it retains the option of corporal punishment for child offenders. In December 2004, members of the legal community suggested that the law needed review, despite its newness, in order to clarify its criminal procedures. One example of the Act's unclarity was brought to light in a 2007 case involving a 13-year-old convicted of murder. Under Section 97(1) of the Act, capital punishment may not be applied to children; Sections 97(2), 97(3), and 97(4) make provisions for alternative punishments for offences which would result in the death penalty if committed by adults, namely detention at the pleasure of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong. However, Section 97(2) was overturned by the Court of Appeal in July 2007 on the grounds that it violated the Constitution of Malaysia's doctrine of separation of powers, leading to the situation that no punishment at all could be rendered.

The Act was meant to give further protection to child offenders. There are, however, a number of shortcomings missing from the Act. Besides the uncertainty of detention period under Section 97, another omission is the maximum length of the remand order. For an adult offender, Section 117 of the Criminal Procedure Code provides for a maximum of 14 days remand. Section 84(2) of the Child Act simply allows the court to make a remand order without prescribing the maximum length of remand. This problem was subsequently remedied in a 2003 case which held that the Criminal Procedure Code would govern the remand period of a child.


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