Latest Updates: Shariah RSS

  • johnpi 5:33 pm on January 26, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
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    Bangladesh teenager receives 101 lashes for becoming pregnant

    A 16-year-old Bangladeshi girl was who raped 8 months ago was given 101 lashes as punishment for having conceived during the assault, Bangladesh’s Daily Star reports. Meanwhile, the paper notes, the alleged rapist received no punishment.

    The village elders who issued the fatwa against the girl also fined the girl’s father and warned him that his family would be forced into isolation if they didn’t pay.

    According to the Telegraph, the girl was so ashamed that she did not lodge a complaint about her attack. Human rights activists say that she married quickly after the attack, but was divorced not long after when it was revealed she was pregnant. She told the Daily Star that the rapist had “spoiled” her life.

    “I want justice,” she said.

     
  • johnpi 12:03 pm on January 14, 2010 | 11 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Muslim poverty, secret marriage, , Shariah, ,

    Al Shabaab flogs one man for flirting, another for having a “secret marriage.”

    “One of the young men was found engaging in secret wedlock which is illegal under Islamic law,” Sheikh Mohamed Moalim, a senior Shebab official, said from Kismayo.

    “The other one was found seducing a lady alone. Both of them confessed to the charges in front of a court and they were publicly punished,” he said.

    The flogging took place over the weekend.

    Youths in some Muslim countries where sex before marriage is forbidden and the cost of a wedding prohibitive sometimes resort to secret marriage, known as “Qudbosir” in Somalia and “Urfi” in most Arab countries.

    The custom, which keeps the matrimony secret from the couples’ parents and sometimes from another wife, is frowned upon in most of Somalia but has been practised in southern regions.

    So by this particular interpretation of the Shariah, its purpose is to prevent those who are too poor to afford a wedding from getting married. And they say capitalists are cruel…

     
  • abunoor 5:41 pm on December 23, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Shariah,


    A Pakistani court has ordered that two men have their ears and noses cut off, as punishment for doing the same to a woman who refused to marry one of them.

    The two brothers were found guilty of kidnapping 20-year-old Fazeelat Bibi, one of their cousins, in September.

    The judge in Lahore also sentenced them to life in prison.

    Sentence was passed on Monday under a rarely invoked Islamic law dating from the 1980s. In the past similar sentences have been revoked on appeal.

     
  • johnpi 9:19 am on December 10, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah, ,

    The chairwoman of the National Commission on Violence Against Women Kamala Chandra Kirana has urged the Indonesian government to review Islamic bylaws.

    An Indonesian organisation has urged the government to review a number of Islamic Sharia-based bylaws deemed discriminative against women as part of its first 100-days programme.

     
  • johnpi 10:05 am on December 9, 2009 | 4 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Shariah,

    Egyptian men form group to fight for their rights against ‘tyranny’ of women in unconditional divorces.

    The group is advocating the position that giving women the right to initiate unconditional divorce violates Shariah.

    I think it’s easy to come in from a Western perspective informed by feminism and mock the men as upended tyrants, but I’m more interested in taking the pressures on the men seriously in forming this group and highlighting that.

    In the conservative, male-oriented, Egyptian society divorced men are considered weak as they are ridiculed for not living up to the stereotypical concept of manhood being about control of women.

    “Divorced men also face a lot of difficulties upon trying to start a new life. Most of them are rejected when they propose to women as if they are infected with some contagious disease.”

     
  • johnpi 1:19 pm on December 2, 2009 | 24 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah,

    Making up shariah as we go: Iran bans make-up for women on TV, state TV chief claims it goes against shariah.

    “Make-up by women during television programs is illegal and against Islamic sharia law … There should not be a single case of a woman wearing make-up during a program,” Ezatollah Zarghami was quoted as saying by the reformist Etemad newspaper.

    He also called for the media equivalent of a ghetto for women.

    Zarghami, a former member of the elite Revolutionary Guards who has been re-appointed by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, also ordered that women guests should “preferably” be hosted by women.

    Because if women interview men they’re likely to fall into each other’s arms before the end of the show. Right.

     
  • johnpi 2:52 pm on November 7, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Shariah, ,

    Al Shabaab applies its own ruthless brand of justice again.

    Islamists in southern Somalia have stoned a man to death for adultery but spared his pregnant girlfriend until she gives birth.

    Abas Hussein Abdirahman, 33, was killed in front of a crowd of some 300 people in the port town of Merka.

    An official from the al-Shabab group said the woman would be killed after she has had her baby.

     
  • johnpi 8:35 am on November 5, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Shariah,

    A decade of Sharia law in north Nigeria breeds frustration.

    A decade after Nigeria’s predominantly Muslim north re-introduced strict Islamic Sharia law, the fervour has fizzled while disillusionment is becoming more strident about its patchy application.

    Out of Nigeria’s 36 states, 12 re-adopted a strict version of Sharia in 1999 nearly a century after it had been abandoned.

    But even one of the radical Muslim clerics who in 1999 actively lobbied for Sharia in Kano State, Abba Koki, conceded there were problems.

    “People are disillusioned with the insincerity, deception and hypocrisy which characterise the implementation of Sharia,” Koki told AFP.

    Some of the criticism directed at the government (apart from those listed in the previous excerpt) is that its punishments are too timid:

    Kano State governor’s spokesman Sule Yau Sule countered critics as narrow-minded.

    “Some people think Sharia is all about stoning to death and amputation, which is a narrow perception. Sharia is about human development, making a person a better being in all spheres and I believe this is what we are doing,” Sule said.

     
  • johnpi 8:56 am on October 28, 2009 | 12 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah,

    AltMuslim has more commentary and perspective on Hizb ut-Tahrir in the wake of the group’s interview with Obama’s Muslim policy advisor, Dalia Mogahed, on a UK talk show called Muslimah Dilemma.

    Mogahed expresses her anger about her treatment here.

    Rather than read more commentary about the incident, why not watch the Youtube clip of the show here and form your own impressions.

    I watched the show and did not find the Hizb ut Tahrir hosts to be nearly the cartoon bad guys Mogahed’s recollection of the experience led me to believe – though I did find Nazreen Nawaz’s (HT rep) narrative about current problems in Muslim majority countries to be evasive, and the vision of the problem-free life of the Caliphate unbelievable. Basically, every controversial incident in Muslim majority countries is a result of not following Shariah. All the self-identified Islamists whose understanding of Sharia has devolved into aggression, harsh punishment and repression of women are just wayward in their understanding of shariah. But the Caliphate is going to get everything right…

    She says Shariah comes directly from Allah (swt) as a way of explaining that you can’t go wrong with Shariah – problem is, the Shariah is being delivered and implemented by imperfect humans who are as at risk of being influenced by racism, classism, tribalism, greed, corruption, sexism, etc as any other human – but that part of the Shariah equation is elided, as so much else is in her comments.

    Removed to the plain of equivalency with other human-administered systems of justice, in example after example it seems too swift, too certain, too unrecoverable and brutal in its punishments (your amputated hands and feet will mark you with your crime for life), and too little interested in the redemption of those it punishes. In a religion that is thick with reminders (ritual) to return to God, it seems discordant to say that the ideal Islamic society removes that option from people by way of capital punishment.

     
  • johnpi 7:41 am on October 28, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Shariah,

    Kuwait’s highest court ruled Wednesday that women lawmakers are not obliged by law to wear the headscarf, a blow to Muslim fundamentalists who want to fully impose Islamic Sharia law in this small oil-rich state.

    The Constitutional Court dismissed a case raised by a voter who claimed that two of four women elected to parliament in May — Rola Dashti and Aseel al-Awadhi — can not be members of the legislature because they don’t comply with the Islamic dress code.

     
  • johnpi 9:16 pm on October 27, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah, ,

    New York Times: ‘Extremism spreads across Indonesian penal code.’

    Most of Indonesia still lives up to its reputation for a moderate, easygoing brand of Islam, and Islamist parties suffered heavy losses in this year’s national elections. But how Aceh went from basic Islamic law to endorsing stoning in a few short years shows how a small, radical minority has successfully pushed its agenda, locally and nationally, by cowing political and religious moderates.

    Though extreme, Aceh [which recently passed the death penalty by stoning for adulterers] is not an isolated case. In recent years, as part of a decentralization of power away from the capital, Jakarta, at least 50 local governments have used their new authority to pass Shariah-based regulations regarding conduct and dress, though none have gone as far as Aceh to deal with criminal matters.

    Rural Acehians support stoning:

    People in Aceh’s rural areas were said to be Shariah’s staunchest supporters, though even most people interviewed here in the provincial capital said they backed the stoning of adulterers.

    “If people are caught, they should be given a warning the first time,” said Fati Ibrahim, 43, a mother of four who was buying dustpans at a large store here. “But if they’re caught a second or third time, they should be stoned.

    “Otherwise, they’ll give Aceh a bad image. They’ll embarrass us outside Aceh, that we’re not practicing Islam as it should be.”

    What would the neighbors think?

     
  • johnpi 8:19 am on October 26, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Shariah,

    Saudi Arabia’s king moved swiftly to pardon a female reporter who had been sentenced to 60 lashes for working for a news outlet that produced a story about a Saudi man’s raunchy single sex life.

    The reporter, Rosanna al-Yami, said earlier that the verdict was intended to be “a punishment for all journalists through me.

     
  • johnpi 7:31 am on October 26, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Shariah, ,

    One of Kuwait’s four new women lawmakers wants to rescind a 2005 electoral law requiring women to comply with Shariah.

    Rola Dashti, who was elected to parliament in May, submitted a proposal to the court last week to remove a 2005 electoral law requirement that women must comply with Islamic Shariah law. The law doesn’t specify what that entails or which women it applies to.

    Last week, the government’s Fatwa Department complicated the matter when it ruled that under Shariah law, Muslim women are required to wear hijab. Conservative lawmakers say that fatwa must apply to parliament’s four female members (two of whom wear hijab, two of whom two do not), the U.A.E. newspaper The National reports. But Dashti has dismissed the fatwa as non-binding and has said that including Shariah regulations in the electoral law is a breach of the constitution.

    Dashti does not wear hijab.

     
  • johnpi 6:00 pm on October 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Shariah, , ,

    Dalia Mogahed, Obama’s Muslim policy advisor, is angry about her treatment at the hands of Hizb ut Tahrir propagandists on a UK television show – as angry as she is at US conservatives who twist what she says to form an equally dishonest, distorted, ideological view of Islam.

    The HT representative on the program dismissed or “reinterpreted” findings I presented so as to not challenge the group’s simplistic utopian ideology which holds liberty in contempt as morally decadent. For example, as I regularly report, our research shows that far from denouncing democracy, Muslims around the world say it is among the things they most admire about the West, specifically mentioning “liberty” as a desirable attribute. Around the world, from Morocco to Malaysia, Muslim respondents described their respect for much of what the West holds dear: freedom of the press, the rule of law, and transparency and accountability of government.

    As much as HT selectively ignored and exploited these findings to push their propaganda, many conservative pundits who diametrically oppose HT’s vision of the world, did much the same. To them, my crime was that I reported that many Muslim women wanted sharia as a source of legislation. I also explained that Muslim women surveyed by Gallup said they believed they should have access to equal legal rights, free employment, voting without family influence, and even leadership positions in government. This suggests that many Muslim women see Sharia differently from those who use it to deny women rights. For simply stating results of survey research, I stood accused of “endorsing” Taliban-like rule, and downplaying the abuses done in the name of sharia.

     
  • johnpi 5:39 pm on October 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah,

    Arbitrary shariah: Saudi judge orders female journalist to be flogged for being associated with Lebanese TV station.

    A court on Saturday sentenced a female Saudi journalist to receive 60 lashes for her links with a Saudi-owned Lebanese TV network which broadcast a provocative racy show in July.

    Rosanna al-Yami said a Jeddah judge dropped all charges that she had been directly involved with a program on Beirut-based network LBC in which a Saudi man boasted of his sex life, outraging Saudi conservatives and leading to the man’s imprisonment.

    However, Yami said the judge sentenced her to 60 lashes for having been a part-time employee for LBC’s Saudi operations. The judge said that LBC had lacked the appropriate operating license.

    “It’s a punishment for all journalists through me,” Yami told AFP by telephone.

    “They just said the channel was illegal. But the Saudi minister of information himself appeared on LBC a couple week ago,” she said.

     
  • johnpi 6:29 am on October 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , Shariah

    Dalia Mogahed: Hizb ut Tahrir talk show producers ‘misled us to score propaganda points.’

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 5:35 am on October 19, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , Shariah

    Islam’s growing role in Malaysian politics.

    For two decades, the ruling Umno-led government invested enormous public resources in building up a network of Islamic institutions. The government’s initial intention was to deflect radical demands for an extreme version of Islamic governance. Over time, however, the effort to outdo its critics led Umno to over-Islamicise the state.

    Umno’s programme has put syariah law, the Syariah Court and an extensive Islamic bureaucracy in place, an effort that has taken on a life of its own. The number of Islamic laws instituted has quadrupled in little more than 10 years. After Iran or Saudi Arabia, Malaysia’s Syariah Court system is probably the most extensive in the Muslim world. The accompanying bureaucracy is not only big but also has more bite than the national Parliament.

    Islamic laws in Malaysia are based on religious doctrine, but codified and passed as statutes by state legislatures. Not much debate attends their enactment, for the fear of being accused of heresy keeps most critics from questioning anything deemed Islamic.

     
  • johnpi 11:18 am on October 15, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah, ,

    God furious if women governors: Iran cleric.

    Grand Ayatollah Lotfollah Safi Golpayghani said the appointment of women in such top jobs was against sharia (Islamic) law.

    “They come to Qom, the centre of Shiite Islam, and announce that they will appoint women as governors of some provinces. Do you want to fight with the Quran and the Prophet with such talks that go against sharia?” he asked.

    Is it any wonder that shariah gets a bad name wit interpretations like this…can somebody point me to what part of the Quran says women can’t be governors?

     
  • johnpi 5:19 am on October 9, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , religious courts, Shariah

    Women in Lebanon are campaigning to take domestic violence cases out of religious courts.

    As lawmakers struggle to form a government three months after Lebanon’s parliamentary elections, women’s rights activists await the opening of parliament to debate a new bill on domestic violence.

    In Lebanon’s multi-confessional democratic system, cases of domestic violence are ruled on in one the country’s 15 religious courts, or family courts.

    The new bill proposes to take domestic violence out of the (mainly Christian and Muslim) religious courts and into the civil system and will cut across confessional lines.

    (via)

     
  • johnpi 10:08 pm on October 8, 2009 | 10 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Shariah,

    President Barack Obama’s adviser on Muslim affairs, Dalia Mogahed, has provoked controversy by appearing on a British television show hosted by a member of Hizb ut-Tahrir to discuss Shariah.

    Miss Mogahed, appointed to the President’s Council on Faith-Based and Neighbourhood Partnerships, said the Western view of Sharia was “oversimplified” and the majority of women around the world associate it with “gender justice”.

    The White House adviser made the remarks on a London-based TV discussion programme hosted by Ibtihal Bsis, a member of the extremist Hizb ut Tahrir party.
    ….

    Mogahed: “I think the reason so many women support Sharia is because they have a very different understanding of sharia than the common perception in Western media. The majority of women around the world associate gender justice, or justice for women, with sharia compliance. The portrayal of Sharia has been oversimplified in many cases.”

    Sharia in its broadest sense is a religious code for living, which decrees such matters as fasting and dressing modestly. However, it has also been interpreted as requiring the separation of men and women.

    It also includes the controversial “Hadd offences”, crimes with specific penalties set by the Koran and the sayings of the prophet Mohammed. These include death by stoning for adultery and homosexuality and the removal of a hand for theft.

    Miss Mogahed admitted that even many Muslims associated Sharia with “maximum criminal punishments” and “laws that… to many people seem unequal to women,” but added: “Part of the reason that there is this perception of Sharia is because Sharia is not well understood and Islam as a faith is not well understood.”

    The video of the broadcast has now been prominently posted on the front page of Hizb ut Tahrir’s website.

     
  • johnpi 11:45 am on October 4, 2009 | 8 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Shariah

    Gang-raped woman gets a year in jail and one hundred lashes in Saudi Arabia.

    A 23-year-old unmarried woman was awarded one-year prison term and 100 lashes for committing adultery and trying to abort the resultant fetus.

    The District Court in Jeddah pronounced the verdict on Saturday after the girl confessed that she had a forced sexual intercourse with a man who had offered her a ride. The man, the girl confessed, took her to a rest house, east of Jeddah, where he and four of friends assaulted her all night long.

    The girl claimed that she became pregnant soon after and went to King Fahd Hospital for Armed Forces in an attempt to carry out an abortion. She was eight weeks’ pregnant then, the hospital confirmed.

    According to the ruling, the woman will be sent to a jail outside Jeddah to spend her time and will be lashed after delivery of her baby who will take the mother’s last name.

    (via)

     
  • johnpi 6:02 am on October 2, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
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    In Malaysia, Islamic NGOs denounce Sisters in Islam for protesting cane whipping, vow to seek legal action.

    Fourteen Muslim non-government organisations (NGO) have taken the Joint Action Group for Gender Equality (JAG) and Sisters In Islam (SIS) to task for describing the Islamic whipping sentence on a part-time model as unacceptable and too severe.

    The Pahang Muslim NGOs want JAG and SIS to retract the statements and apologise to Muslims in the country, said Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement (Abim) deputy president Amidi Abdul Manan on their behalf.

    “The Pahang Islamic Administration and Malay Custom Act 1982 (Amendment 1987), which is under the jurisdiction of the Syariah Court, was assented by the Sultan of Pahang.

    “Insulting the Syariah law can be deemed as insulting the Sultan of Pahang. We also call on devotees of other religions not to interfere in Islamic affairs,” he told reporters here , Friday.

    JAG and SIS, on Wednesday, said the decision to whip part-time model Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno for drinking beer was a torture, a breach of human rights and dehumanising.

    Amidi said the NGOs would seek a declaration to stop JAG and SIS from making further derogatory remarks on Syariah penalties.

    “We fully support the sentence and the stand taken by Kartika Sari Dewi and her family to accept the punishment.

    “We had also lodged a police report against JAG and SIS for insulting Islam at the Kuantan police district headquarters today,” he said.

     
  • johnpi 3:49 pm on September 28, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Shariah

    Beer-drinking Muslim woman’s caning to go ahead.

     
  • johnpi 11:52 am on September 14, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Shariah

    CNN reports that a 12-year-old Yemeni girl, who was forced into marriage, died during a painful childbirth that also killed her baby, a children’s rights group said Monday. Meanwhile, the Yemeni parliament dithers over a minimum marriage age law.

    Fawziya Ammodi struggled for three days in labor, before dying of severe bleeding at a hospital on Friday, said the Seyaj Organization for the Protection of Children.

    “Although the cause of her death was lack of medical care, the real case was the lack of education in Yemen and the fact that child marriages keep happening,” said Seyaj President Ahmed al-Qureshi.

    Born into an impoverished family in Hodeidah, Fawziya was forced to drop out of school and married off to a 24-year-old man last year, al-Qureshi said.
    ….

    The Yemeni parliament tried in February to pass a law, setting the minimum marriage age at 17. But the measure has not reached the president because many parliamentarians argued it violates sharia, or Islamic law, which does not stipulate a minimum age.

    They should name the law after the girl and pass it in memorial of her and the dead baby.

     
  • johnpi 6:25 pm on September 7, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah,

    The Sudanese woman who was facing flogging for wearing trousers had her case dismissed with a fine. She says she will refuse to pay the fine and could be put in jail for a month.

    She has also said she wants to get rid of Article 152 of the Sudanese penal code, which decrees up to 40 lashes for anyone “who commits an indecent act which violates public morality or wears indecent clothing”.

    She says the article “is both against the constitution and sharia [Islamic law]” and that nothing in the Quran says that women should be flogged over what they wear.

     
  • johnpi 6:43 pm on August 26, 2009 | 15 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Shariah

    The model sentenced to be caned could deflect unwelcome international publicity if she appeals her sentence. The Malaysian prime minister has dropped hints, but generally looks powerless as she refuses and demands her punishment.

    As Kartika awaits her punishment, Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak spoke out on Tuesday, advising her to appeal her sentence. Kartika’s case has sparked global condemnation, and presumably Najib would prefer not to deal with any body blows to Malaysia’s international status. “I believe the authorities concerned are sensitive on this matter and realize the implications of this case,” he said at a press conference. “I feel the person concerned should appeal to the state authorities and not be so willing to accept the punishment.”
    ….

    Perhaps fearing a backlash from Islamic officials, Kartika lodged a police report on Monday saying she is not a party to the decision to postpone the caning. “We don’t want to be blamed later,” she said, “[by people who might say]that we had avoided punishment and embarrassed Islam.”

     
  • johnpi 4:55 pm on August 26, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Shariah

    Moderate Malaysia’s image bruised over beer caning.

    The case of Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno, a former model and nurse, drew the attention of international media and rights groups and presented a harsh view of the kind of Islamic justice dispensed in one of the world’s most moderate and stable Muslim-majority countries.

    “It is pretty embarrassing,” Marina Mahathir, a leading women’s activist and the daughter of former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, told The Associated Press in an interview.

    Kartika was charged with violating a law prohibiting Muslims from drinking alcohol. Marina said it raised a key question about how Islamic laws are applied in Malaysia. “Are they working to dispense justice or to provide moral lessons for the rest of us?” she said.

    Malaysia follows a dual-track justice system. Shariah laws apply to Muslims, who make up about 60 percent of the 27 million population, in all personal matters. Non-Muslims — the Chinese, Indian, Sikh and other minorities — are covered by civil laws, and are free to drink.

    Often the two sets of laws collide and the winner usually is the Islamic system. For example, a Muslim who converts from Islam is guilty of apostasy under Shariah laws — punishable by jail and fine — even though freedom of religion is guaranteed by the constitution.

     
  • johnpi 8:26 pm on July 29, 2009 | 10 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Shariah,

    Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf rebuts the Shariah court that sentenced a Malaysian woman to a whipping with fines for alcohol consumption:

    I would urge the Malaysian Syariah authorities to seriously reconsider the Syariah basis of this law on the following Syariah grounds:

    Neither the Quran nor the Hadith invokes a penalty for alcohol consumption. The sin of consuming alcohol is described in the Quran in the mildest language of prohibition.

    When it comes to dietary laws, the Quran commands the believers in Sura 5:3: “forbidden (hurrimat) to you is the dead animal, loose blood, and the flesh of the pig”.

    The 90th verse of the same Sura cautions the believers that “wine, gambling, etc, are an impurity so avoid them (fa-jtanibuh)”.

    Some legal scholars suggest that the divine command ijtinab, to avoid something, is milder language than tahrim, prohibition.

    A Muslim consuming a glass of wine with a pork chop commits a more serious offence in eating pork; yet as there is no Quran or Hadith penalty for consuming pork, there is also none for alcohol consumption.

    The imam goes on to explain the punishment comes from the time of Caliph Umar when a committee was convened to decided what to do with a drunk man who wandered around in te evening yelling slanderous comments in the streets of Madina. the sentence of 80 lashes was eventually leveled against the man – the sentence for slander.

    Since that time, this has been considered the maximum penalty for alcohol consumption, based on utilising the Syariah concept of ta`zir (deterrence).

    I disagree with this being the mandatory sentence for the offence of wine consumption, because it is the maximum sentence for another, separate offence – slander – albeit committed under the influence of alcohol.

    Had the man just fallen on the street in a stupor and suffered a terrible hangover without having hurt anyone, no punishment would have been established.

     
  • johnpi 5:40 am on July 22, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Shariah,

    From Hizb ut-Tahrir’s online English newspaper, The Khilafah:

    Since then, fighting has continued between the current “transitional federal government” led by Sheikh Sharif Ahmed and “Al-Shabab” who are fighting to restore Islamic rule in Somalia. In response, to the continued pressure from the Muslims, the US has sent weapons to the weakening Sharif’s regime to thwart a takeover by those Muslims that seek to rule by what Allah سبحانه وتعالى has revealed.

    So the version of Shariah that Hizb ut-Tahrir wants to establish is the same one that Al-Shabab is applying in Somalia, where this happened, along with assorted other deviancies. No thanks…

     
  • johnpi 4:53 am on July 22, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Shariah,

    More non-Muslim Britons use Shariah courts.

    The Muslim Arbitration Tribunal claims that 5 percent of the cases it has handled involved non-Muslims who used the system of Islamic law because British courts were too costly or cumbersome, The Times of London reported Tuesday.

    Anti-Shariah activist Dennis MacEoin is also quoted, basically implying people go to Shariah court because women are more likely to get a bad deal.

     
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