Sunday, December 29, 2024

Kelantan’s halal certification mandate raises concerns among netizens





Kelantan’s halal certification mandate raises concerns among netizens





THE Kelantan state government has mandated halal certification for food and beverage outlets to renew business licenses, starting with Kota Bharu Municipal Council-Islamic City (MPKB-BRI).

The initiative will expand to other local councils. From January to December, 453 businesses in Kelantan received halal certification, including hotels, restaurants, pharmacies and salons. Of these, 405 are Malay-owned and 48 are non-Muslim-owned.

Certification requires meeting eight criteria, such as kitchen management and halal-certified materials. But the mandate has sparked debates online, with the usual sarcasm from netizens. Here are some of the most bizarre comments found online.

Some users are questioning whether the non-halal restaurants will be forced out of business.

An X user boldly asked if an establishment selling alcohol and pork would also need to apply for the halal certificate if they wanted their business licence to continue.


Mustahil untuk dikuatkuasakan pada semua perniagaan F&B? Bagaimana untuk memiliki sijil Halal di premis yang menjual makanan Khinzir atau makanan bukan Halal? Larang atau Tutup semua F&B bukan Halal diKelantan?
25
Reply
Copy link

This questioning led to an argument among X users saying that some people are overreacting to this new rule. But others chimed in, citing that this is a legitimate concern, as the rule is announced to be one that will cover all food and beverage outlets. They did not specify if it was a Muslim or non-Muslim restaurant.


Sebenarnya tak salah dia Tanya soalan ini kan? Logicnya ada kan? Kalau wajib ada Cert Halal, bagaimana pula dengan kedai2 China yg jual makanan berrasaskan daging babi, memang sah tak akan dapat sijil ni kan? So macam mana ,Kena tutup ke? Soalan dia la..jangan kena trigger.
4
Reply
Copy link

Instead of this new enforcement, non-Muslims who own halal establishments may not face any major hurdles. Unfortunately, there are a number of Muslim restaurants that do not actually have the certificates. This is a concern towards some users, and they claim it might affect more Muslim business owners than thought if they do not apply for the licence.


This is going to impact the malay muslim F&B businesses real hard. The non muslim business owner understand the need to have the halal cert as compulsory in order to serve a wider clientele while this isn't so for the majority muslim business owners. Interesting times.
5
Reply
Copy link

Others shared their concerns with the roadside sellers, as they may not have enough funds to apply for a halal certificate. Users claim that such businesses might be heavily impacted with this enforcement. — Dec 28, 2024


Penjaja kecil yang jual nasi lemak, nasi kerabu, kuih-muih, dll mati katak le mcm tu!
10
Reply
Copy link


Main photo credit: The Borneo Post


***


kt comments:

This is not the Malaya-Malaysia our founding fathers agreed to.


No comments:

Post a Comment