Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


T in the Park

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Burning Issue



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 09 October 2008
Would Sharia law courts create a divisive and two-tier legal system?
Yes

Shakti Women's Aid, for black, minority ethnic women, based in Edinburgh

A MAJORITY of our clients are Muslim and currently seek justice in the Scottish court system for the physical, emotional and sexual abuse that they have endured from t
heir partners and husbands.

If these women will have the alternative of seeking final and binding judgment on their domestic abuse cases from a Sharia court then, as newspaper reports have reported, they stand to receive little or no justice.

They will be disadvantaged, disfavoured and possibly forced to stay in abusive relationships as it is extremely likely that they would be presenting themselves for judgment to a room full of men who may have little or no understanding of domestic abuse and are most likely to be prejudiced against women.

Muslim victims who do not present themselves to a sheriff will miss the benefits of a legal system that gives them a right to appeal and uses laws that are designed to protect them through a democratic process.

It is imperative Muslim women, most of whom come from Black minority ethnic (BME) communities, seek justice within the existing legal system as it ensures visibility to the extent of the problem of domestic abuse in minority communities.

If these women, who are already on the periphery of Scottish society for a number of reasons, increasingly cease to use mainstream statutory services they will fall off the radar of policymakers and funders who ensure specialist BME services continue to exist. This could create a further divide in an unequal Scottish society where women, especially BME women, are still fighting for equality.

No

MUFTI ABDUL BARKATULLA

member of sharia panel of judges, Islamic Sharia Council, London

S

HARIA is voluntarily practised as governing law throughout the Muslim world in many aspects of personal and social life. Increasingly, Sharia is emerging as choice of law in business and commercial practices as well.

The UK Treasury, Financial Services Authority and English High Courts have shown accommodation to Sharia law in business and finance over the last few years and, as a result, the UK is seen as a model by the rest of the secular world.

Sharia drives its strength from grass-root Muslim individuals who wish to abide by the Sharia law as a matter of choice not coercion. It is in this context that Family Shari courts have come into the limelight on the lines of Jewish Beth Din.

Mostly, both disputing parties come forward and submit on the line of arbitration tribunals to adhere to Sharia.

Sharia courts are very careful not to step over civil courts' domain of jurisdiction. Thus only matters pertaining to religious matters are dealt with. For instance while deciding on matrimonial disputes, Sharia courts do not take a position on child custody and property matters. Based on my 25 years experience as a member of Sharia judges panel, I have always found the court's decision resolving individual, family and group predicaments rather than causing any divisions within the community. Those who choose not to abide by Sharia (and there are large numbers of them) are free to take recourse to the British courts' systems. It is a matter of choice and conviction, rather than coercion and compulsion.





The full article contains 555 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 08 October 2008 11:14 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Unimpressed one,

09/10/2008 08:17:38
This sort of talk should be nipped in the bud. Basing an alternative law system on a backward, medieval religion that inherently trashes women's human rights should be outlawed. Any sensible person should condemn this nonsense.
2

larryt,

09/10/2008 09:06:37
Extra judicial fora should be encouraged. The last thing anyone should want to do is to go to the law courts. If matters can be settled between parties in a way that is not contrary to the law of the land the law of the land should support it by leaving the people who use it alone. If the law of the land actually likes some of the conclusions reached in extra judicial fora and it is believed that these decisions would benefit society as a whole, it should through its own legislature adopt these ideas. That's what happens anyway even if people don't realise it. Law has lots of sources, some on the face of it, pretty unsavoury!
3

Guga II,

Rockall 09/10/2008 09:10:43
If these people want to be ruled by Sharia law, then I strongly suggest that they move to a country that operates under that system.

Scottish law does, and should continue, to apply to everyone living in Scotland. There is no room for differing legal systems based on particular religions.

Taken to its logical and farcical conclusion, if a group of people living in Scotland are immigrants from Haiti, does that mean they have the right to set up a legal system based on voodoo beliefs?

If the SNP, or any political party, condones such extra-territorial legal jurisdiction for immigrants living in Scotland, they will end up alienating the Scottish people.

The old adage about when you live in Rome, do as the Romans do, applies to the legal system. If I live in Saudi Arabia, I have no alternative but to accept their legal system. They will not make any allowances for me being a foreigner in their country; nor should they. The same should apply for any foreigners, or foreign immigrants living in Scotland. They should accept that they have to comply with Scottish law. If they don't like it, no-one is stopping them from leaving.
4

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 09/10/2008 09:55:49
Do Sharia courts accept "evidence" from speed cameras and do they demand that the accused is forced to provide evidence for their own prosecution?

If not, then I'm going to convert to Islam and insist that any case agaist me is heard in a Sharia court.
5

Green,

Dundee 10/10/2008 15:32:28
The trouble with MUFTI ABDUL BARKATULLA's blithe comment is that research done by the BBC in 2007 found that large numbers of Muslim women did not know of their rights (once resident in the UK) to go to the British courts for family and divorce issues. Who fails to tell them of their rights and leaves them open to be exploited by these 'courts'(which charge large fees.) Could it be those who benefit form the monies earned by these self created and wholly self serving organisations? They have been doing a great job recently, claiming to be courts. This is not an never has been true, just as the claims for Jewish 'courts' in this country are very misleading.

If you want your affairs and legal staus to be dealt with in this country, you need to comply with UK law and deal with Uk courts. Many people, particularly women have beeen greatly misled (and their money wasted) by being denied access to the genuine courts.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.