Ex-husband in conversion case fined for contempt of court

05 Apr 2023 01:43pm
A father accused of abducting his three children and registering them as Muslim converts without his ex-wife's consent was fined RM20,000 by the High Court for contempt of court.
A father accused of abducting his three children and registering them as Muslim converts without his ex-wife's consent was fined RM20,000 by the High Court for contempt of court.

KUALA LUMPUR - A father who has been accused of abducting his three children and registering them as Muslim converts without his ex-wife's consent was fined RM20,000 by the High Court here today for contempt of court.

Judge Evrol Mariette Peters imposed the sentence on Muhammad Nagahswaran Muniandy, who is the former husband of Loh Siew Hong, and ordered him to pay the fine, in default of 14-day jail, within 14 days, starting today.

The judge said Muhammad Nagahswaran had interfered with the administration of justice.

She made the ruling after allowing Loh’s application to initiate committal proceedings against Muhammad Nagahswaran.

In the application, Loh claimed that there was a court order that granted her sole custody over her three children - a pair of 15-year-old twin girls and an 11-year-old boy on March 31, 2021, which was violated by her ex-husband.

Peters, in her judgment, said the respondent (Muhammad Nagahswaran) was well aware of what he had done and that he had failed to comply with the court order that the petitioner (Loh) was awarded sole guardianship custody of care and control of the children.

"And from the affidavits, the respondent had even involved family members in preventing the children from being returned to the petitioner," she said.

The judge said in the present case, the respondent's conduct in not complying with the court order had triggered a chain of events, which not only gave the petitioner a runaround, going through the courts and filing numerous applications, just to reunite with the children.

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"It had also deprived the children of their mother after being passed around from one person to another. The petitioner was left in limbo," Peters said.

The judge also pointed out that the court must fulfil its responsibilities by passing an appropriate sentence to reflect the extreme seriousness of the case, in particular, the respondent's interference with the administration of justice.

The court ordered the respondent to pay RM6,000 in costs. - BERNAMA