
Deputy menteri besar Fadzli Hassan said despite previous legal challenges, the state government was determined to enhance the law and its enforcement.
“EKJS 2019 was introduced to address shariah offences including sodomy, musahaqah (same-sex relations between women) and other immoral acts that defile the sanctity of religious life.
“The state does not recognise deviant cultures that go against Islamic teachings. LGBT practices are a clear transgression of human nature, which undermines morals and social harmony,” he said in a statement on Facebook today.
To boost prevention and enforcement, the state has formed a special committee involving the police, the Kelantan Islamic religious affairs department, the Kelantan health department, the Kelantan Islamic Foundation, the social welfare department and the National Anti-Drugs Agency.
The committee is responsible for coordinating comprehensive and inter-agency efforts to address moral decay and deviant behaviour.
Fadzli said the state government had implemented the Rabbani Community Culture Programme to enhance Islamic understanding, engage with at-risk communities, and build resilience against the spread of social ills.
He called on the federal government, particularly the communications ministry and the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission, to restrict access to online platforms that promote immoral content.
“The digital space must not be left unregulated and allowed to corrupt the minds and morals of society, especially the younger generation,” he said.
Earlier today, Kelantan police confirmed a raid on an LGBT-related gathering involving over 20 local men at a bungalow on Jalan Kemumin here in mid-June.
During the operation, authorities found hundreds of condoms and several boxes of HIV medication in a specially designated room believed to be used by the organisers for storage.