Refleksi : Pakistan mengalami arabisasi, apakah NKRI bisa juga demikian?

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\07\01\story_1-7-2010_pg3_3

Thursday, July 01, 2010

VIEW: Chairing the Council of Islamic Ideology -Nazish Brohi

 That the political party that drafts and proposes a law that the Supreme Court 
finds in conflict with other laws to be given leadership of an institution with 
the power to review all laws is a systemic short circuit

Pakistan has witnessed accelerated Saudiisation and all discourse seems 
increasingly legitimised only through religious inferences, so what difference 
does handing of the chairmanship of an Islamic review body, the Council of 
Islamic Ideology (CII), to a deputy of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI-F) make?

The JUI-F is a political player whose influence is far wider than is reflected 
by its narrow vote share. While coalition acrobatics compel barters such as the 
nomination of Maulana Sherani to the CII, civil society groups such as Women's 
Action Forum (WAF) and Insani Jamhoori Ittihad have cautioned against such 
utilitarian decisions. The alarm stems as much from the history of the CII 
rulings as from the track record of the JUI-F, providing a legitimate cause of 
concern at the conflation of the two.

The study of the time period in which the JUI-F formed the government in Khyber 
Pakhtunkhwa in alliance with the Jamaat-i-Islami under the MMA (Muttahida 
Majlis-e-Amal) in 2002-2006 is instructive. The outline of what the JUI-F 
considers as enshrining of Islamic law is evident in the Hasba Act proposed and 
passed by its provincial assembly, the implementation of which was blocked by 
the Supreme Court under Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, who struck it down as 
unconstitutional. 

The Hasba Act established squads for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of 
Vice (Amar Bil-Maroof Wa nahi Anil-Munkar), with a broad mandate to "protect 
Islamic values and etiquettes" and to "discourage un-Islamic social values", 
with ultimate arbitration by a Mohtasib (ombudsman), whose authority could not 
be challenged by any court of law in the country. Since values and etiquette 
are highly subjective and context-specific, a woman driving a car could 
constitute a violation, but the law went further to define as within its ambit 
enforcing of obedience to parental orders (Section 23[XXV]), so people could be 
jailed for arguing with their parent. While this stipulation conjures absurd 
situations, it was in effect a roundabout way of legally instituting a Wali 
(guardian) of women, a move that women's groups have been battling against in 
Pakistan and other Muslim majority countries. 

That the political party that drafts and proposes a law that the Supreme Court 
finds in conflict with other laws to be given leadership of an institution with 
the power to review all laws is a systemic short circuit. 

Another legislation passed by the JUI-F government replaced the then-existing 
NWFP Prohibition of Dancing Act 1974, which banned women from dancing in public 
for remuneration, with a new Prohibition of Singing, Dancing and Performing Act 
2004 that banned any person, not just women, from any musical expression, not 
just paid dancing, at any place, not just public places, giving police the 
authority to raid homes on the suspicion of music being played inside. Maulana 
Fazlur Rehman of JUI-F stated on record at that point that "those who oppose 
the imposition of our Islamic system are terrorists" ('All who oppose Islamic 
system are terrorists: Fazl', Daily Times, August 30, 2004).

There are many other illustrations of what 'making Islamic' means for the 
JUI-F. They opposed and closed a shelter for women survivors of violence in 
Peshawar, Mera Ghar, with Siraj-ul-Haq stating that those who want to focus on 
violence against women want to destroy Islamic and Pukhtun culture. Their 
anti-obscenity drives in Khyber included burning posters and products of family 
planning - the pyres were lit by their Minister of Religious Affairs Amanullah 
Haqqani. They set up Salaat Committees, registered as NGOs, to round up people 
into mosques at prayer times, with attendance registers outside mosques. Many 
would remember the Marathon episode of 2005 where schoolgirls participating in 
a running race became a battle for the soul of Islam. The avowed aim of the 
MMA, according to their slogan, was: 'Allah ki zameen per Allah ka nizaam'. 
With the JUI-F heading the CII, the rest of Pakistan can gear up for finding 
itself defending the status quo instead of pushing for progressive change.

The religious right-wing has had a troubled past with the CII itself, where 
Liaquat Baloch stated that the only legitimate body to decide on the Hudood 
Ordinances was the CII, and when the CII itself, under Dr Khalid Masud, a 
notable scholar, ruled that the Hudood laws and Blasphemy Laws were man-made 
and not divine, hence could be changed, the MMA said that the CII had bowed 
under US pressure and had therefore become its agent. 

Then too, the MMA threatened to resign from the provincial and national 
assemblies if the Hudood Ordinances were changed. In 2006, Javed Ahmed Ghamdi 
resigned from the CII because the JUI-F and the MMA pressured the government to 
form yet another parallel body to review the Women's Protection Act, not 
accepting the mandate of the CII to do so. Ghamdi stated that the Ulema 
Committee was a breach of CII jurisdiction while he categorically said, "I have 
completely disagreed with the MMA's stance on the Women's Protection Bill."

More recently, once Sherani was on board, the CII went behind its chairman's 
back and while Dr Masud was out of the country, gave a statement opposing the 
Domestic Violence (Prevention and Protection) Bill, warning that it would push 
up divorce rates and fan unending family feuds, opposing the National 
Commission on the Status of Women. This was later retracted by Dr Masud, who 
said this was not the official position of the CII.

This article does not even begin to address the non-suitability with regard to 
the JUI-F's positions on militancy. The political party that has selectively 
upheld, rejected and manipulated the CII to propagate and enforce their narrow 
vision of religious correctness is being offered stewardship of the 
institution. 

Others continue to question that in face of the Federal Shariat Court, Shariat 
Appellate benches, religious referencing in judgements of all High Courts and 
Supreme Court, incorporation of the Objectives Resolution, constitutional 
provisions that every law must be in accord with Islam, seven religious 
political parties, 12 religious television channels, why do we even need the 
CII?

Nazish Brohi is a social activist and an author. She can be reached at 
[email protected]


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