Our society is a growing community of offenders, emphasizing what we believe is fair and right, not merely condemning us. As Martin Luther King broke several laws walking in front of our country, he did so to express his passionate beliefs about our Constitution. Unfortunately, so far it is difficult for us to fully integrate the laws related to the Constitution, which is causing the failure of some rules, which is the correct reason.
This does not mean that Malaysia does not have the right to enact its own law. Of course you can. When you criticize foreign law, some people respond as you asked us to invade them. They have the right to make their own laws, and I will not go there to take action immediately. I also do not want to deprive Saudi Arabia, the United States, or Australia the right to enact its own law. But some of their laws are not good laws, and I refuse the suggestion that no one should ever say this.
Nominally, the human rights of Saudi Arabia are protected by the legal compliance of the Kingdom of Islamic law. In general, Saudi Arabia's human rights are considered to be poor and rarely exist. Saudi Arabian Democracy and Human Rights Center stated that its discriminatory practices have caused any objections against women, non-Muslim religious minorities and Saudi authorities. It is very difficult. Human Rights Watch reports Saudi Arabia positively persecuting Shia religious minorities. This includes the arrest of religious leaders and repeated police closure of the Shiite mosque.
The human rights of Saudi Arabia are based on the Islamic law of Saudi Arabian royal family. Saudi Arabian government is also known and criticized for lack of interest in religious, political minorities, homosexuality, women. As mentioned earlier, Article 26 of the Saudi Arabian Basic Law of Saudi Arabia regulates the human rights of Saudi Arabia. Thereafter, in October 1997 Kingdom of Saudi Arabia approved the international convention for torture under the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. The first independent human rights organization in Saudi Arabia, the National Human Rights Association, was founded in 2004. In 2008, the Shura committee approved the Arab human rights charter.