http://gulfnews.com/news/region/lebanon/lebanon-s-top-cleric-issues-fatwa-against-civil-marriage-1.1139123

Lebanon’s top cleric issues fatwa against civil marriage
The edict comes a day after Sulaiman tweets he will remain steadfast in 
supporting such unions

  a.. AFP 
  b.. Published: 12:50 January 29, 2013 
  c.. 

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  a.. Beirut: Lebanon’s top Sunni Muslim authority on Monday issued a fatwa 
against moves to legalise civil marriages inside the country, where couples of 
different faiths have to travel abroad to tie the knot.

The religious edict came a day after President Michel Sulaiman tweeted that he 
would remain steadfast in supporting such unions, while Prime Minister Najeeb 
Mikati wrote on his Twitter account that a consensus was required to address 
the issue.

“Any Muslim with legal or executive authority in Lebanon who supports the 
legalisation of civil marriage is an apostate and outside the religion of 
Islam,” Grand Mufti Shaikh Mohammad Rashid Qabbani said on the website of Dar 
Al Fatwa, the official institution for fatwas.

“There are predators lurking among us, trying to sow the bacteria of civil 
marriage in Lebanon, but they should know that the religious scholars will not 
hesitate to do their duty and prevent the passage of such a bill. “

Qabbani said offenders would not be eligible to be buried in a Muslim cemetery.

Sulaiman, a Christian, tweeted that he would “respond to the evolution and 
aspirations of the people and prepare the appropriate laws for the issue of 
civil marriage.”

Related Links 
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  b.. Lebanese president backs civil marriages
“There are authorities opposed to civil marriage, but this will not sway my 
convictions or my quest to put the train on the right track,” he said in 
another tweet.

But after meeting Sulaiman on Sunday, Mikati, a Sunni, tweeted in Arabic “the 
current circumstances do not allow us to address new controversial topics that 
create divisions.” He added in English: “I believe that the civil marriage 
issue cannot be dealt with from a top-down approach.”

The campaign for civil marriage in multi-faith Lebanon, which is considered a 
liberal Arab country in a conservative region, has gained momentum with a 
daring initiative to create new jurisprudence.

Kholoud Sukkariyeh and Nidal Darwish announced earlier this month they had wed 
as a secular couple by having their religious sects legally struck from their 
family registers under an article dating from the 1936 French mandate. Sulaiman 
has since lobbied for a civil marriage law as a “very important step in 
eradicating sectarianism and solidifying national unity.”

Despite a long-running campaign by civil groups, civil marriage has no legal 
basis in Lebanon, a country of around four million people who belong to 18 
different religious communities, mainly Christian and Muslim. Former president 
Elias Hrawi in 1998 proposed a similar law, which gained approval from the 
cabinet only to be halted amid widespread opposition from the country’s 
religious authorities. Lebanese authorities recognise civil weddings only if 
they have been registered abroad, and thousands of mixed-faith couples have 
travelled to nearby Cyprus or Turkey to marry. Most religious faiths have their 
own regulations governing marriage, divorce and inheritance, and mixed 
Christian-Muslim weddings in Lebanon are often discouraged unless one of the 
potential spouses converts.

Christian religious authorities have yet to comment on the issue.


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