Post by pieter on Dec 3, 2009 8:13:13 GMT -7
Sharia courts give The Hague the shivers
Stoning. Chopping off hands. Whippings and beatings. When people hear the word ‘Sharia’, these are the images that spring to mind. But Islamic justice can also be used in civil law. Like in family law, and in divorce and inheritance cases.
These areas of Sharia law could be applied in certain Dutch mosques.
The government is looking into whether the Netherlands, like Great Britain, should allow some kind of Sharia law. The idea terrifies Dutch politicians because Islamic law means inequality between men and women. Everyone in the Dutch political world is also well aware that Freedom Party leader and anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders is bound to make enormous electoral mileage from it.
Justice Minister Ernst Hirsch Ballin is looking into the details of the system. In a letter to MPs, he says it is the government’s duty “to ensure that no parallel society evolves where people take the law into their own hands or have an independent system of justice."
Close down mosques
An overwhelming parliamentary majority is fiercely opposed to any form of Sharia. MPs say mosques where imams dispense Sharia rulings should be closed down. Socialist Party MP Sadet Karabulut (of Turkish-Kurd descent) argues that “Islamic law is contrary to our own laws and regulations”. “Islam often places women in an inferior position. They can, for example, be forced to have sex with their husbands. Men are allowed to be polygamous and that is against Dutch law,” she explains.
Maurits Berger, Leiden University’s professor of Islam in the Western world, is also against Sharia, but only where it runs contrary to Dutch law: “No stoning, child marriage or chopping off of hands.”
Free choice
Dr Berger believes there is room for manoeuvre: “For example, in marriage law, people can choose to submit to religious rules which can lead to inequality between men and women. This happens in the case of orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Protestants. I don’t want to see the government regulating how these people should live their lives.”
Dr Berger thinks it would be difficult to forbid Muslims their courts. The Netherlands has had Jewish and Roman Catholic courts for years. The priests and rabbis hand down rulings which sometimes directly contradict Dutch law.
Stoning. Chopping off hands. Whippings and beatings. When people hear the word ‘Sharia’, these are the images that spring to mind. But Islamic justice can also be used in civil law. Like in family law, and in divorce and inheritance cases.
These areas of Sharia law could be applied in certain Dutch mosques.
The government is looking into whether the Netherlands, like Great Britain, should allow some kind of Sharia law. The idea terrifies Dutch politicians because Islamic law means inequality between men and women. Everyone in the Dutch political world is also well aware that Freedom Party leader and anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders is bound to make enormous electoral mileage from it.
Justice Minister Ernst Hirsch Ballin is looking into the details of the system. In a letter to MPs, he says it is the government’s duty “to ensure that no parallel society evolves where people take the law into their own hands or have an independent system of justice."
Close down mosques
An overwhelming parliamentary majority is fiercely opposed to any form of Sharia. MPs say mosques where imams dispense Sharia rulings should be closed down. Socialist Party MP Sadet Karabulut (of Turkish-Kurd descent) argues that “Islamic law is contrary to our own laws and regulations”. “Islam often places women in an inferior position. They can, for example, be forced to have sex with their husbands. Men are allowed to be polygamous and that is against Dutch law,” she explains.
Maurits Berger, Leiden University’s professor of Islam in the Western world, is also against Sharia, but only where it runs contrary to Dutch law: “No stoning, child marriage or chopping off of hands.”
Free choice
Dr Berger believes there is room for manoeuvre: “For example, in marriage law, people can choose to submit to religious rules which can lead to inequality between men and women. This happens in the case of orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Protestants. I don’t want to see the government regulating how these people should live their lives.”
Dr Berger thinks it would be difficult to forbid Muslims their courts. The Netherlands has had Jewish and Roman Catholic courts for years. The priests and rabbis hand down rulings which sometimes directly contradict Dutch law.