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Friday, May 13, 2011

[ALOCHONA] Bangladesh lifts fatwa ban but forbids enforcement






 

http://www.amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2011/05/13/81264


Bangladesh lifts fatwa ban but forbids enforcement

Bangladesh lifts fatwa ban but forbids enforcement
Bangladesh lifts fatwa ban but forbids enforcement
The Bangladesh Supreme  court has ruled that priest can issue fatwas – Islamic religious edicts – but said that they cannot be enforced.
A high court ruling 10 years ago banned fatwas altogether after several women were sentenced to brutal punishments.
Clerics appealed against that ruling, arguing that fatwas were an integral part of Islamic religious practice.
Correspondents say this decision allows clerics to practise Koranic law but leaves them no power to punish people.
Bangladesh, which is overpoweringly Muslim, has a secular legal system. Most of the country's population practices a moderate version of Islam.
"No fatwa can be issued against the obtainable laws of the country. That means that no-one can dole out punishments in the name of a fatwa, especially when it may be mental or physical punishment," Attorney General Mahbubey Alam told the Bengali service.
Some rights groups have also welcome the ruling, arguing that it will help to protect women from punishments handed down to them in the name of religion.
"The order is actually a very positive one. We certainly believe that it will help women save themselves from the torture that is quite often perpetrated on them in the name of religious injunctions," Sultana Kamal of the rights group Ain o Salish Kendra told the BBC.
But other groups still argue that fatwas should have remain illegal. They say that despite the ban on fatwas over the past decade, women have still been publicly whipped when accused of transgressions such as adultery or having a child out of wedlock.
In one infamous case earlier this year a 14-year-old girl died after being publicly lashed for allegedly having an extra-marital affair.
Fatwas issue by village councils – known as shalish – are often used to resolve local disputes in poor, rural areas.

Anwarul Islam Mukul
USA


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