The International Women's Media Foundation (IWMF) has joined a growing boycott against the Beverly Hills Hotel, pulling its Courage in Journalism Awards ceremony from the venue nine days before the event takes place. The owner of the iconic Tinsel Town hospitality brand, the Sultan of Brunei (otherwise known as Hassanal Bolkiah), is implementing Sharia Law criminal codes in Brunei that will apply capital punishment to homosexuality and adultery. More specifically, the laws call for amputations, flogging of women who have abortions and stoning to death of gay men and lesbians. People are naturally outraged, and organizations and celebrities (Jay Leno, Ellen DeGeneres, Richard Branson, etc.) are starting to react. Entertainment industry legend Clive Davis and Dreamworks chief Jeffrey Katzenberg are no longer clientele, according to FoxNews.com. The teen suicide prevention charity Teen Line pulled its $60,000 down payment to take an event elsewhere, per multiple reports, while Adweek sibling The Hollywood Reporter apparently told the Beverly Hills Hotel that it will no longer hold its yearly Women in Entertainment breakfast there. The Beverly Hills Hotel's ritzy brand—known for decades as a hangout for the likes of Marilyn Monroe and Orson Welles—is being badly damaged due to the Sultanate's plan to implement Sharia law. Even if the leader of Brunei sells off the hotel, the association will probably sting the brand for years. The IWMF is the latest to jump ship in the last few days. The org's past events have brought in names such as Angelina Jolie, Sharon Stone, Olivia Wilde and Christiane Amanpour. "We, the IWMF, can no longer hold an event at a venue whose owner stands for the violation of the very human rights we fight for," said Elisa Lees Muñoz, executive director of the the IWMF. "As a consequence to the introduction of Sharia law in Brunei, we have decided to cancel our contract with the Beverly Hills Hotel and move this year's Courage Awards to another location." The Sultan's government runs the Brunei Investment Agency, which owns the Dorchester Collection, a portfolio of 10 hotels including the Beverly Hills and the Hotel Bel-Air.