Islamic sharia courts in Britain are now 'legally binding'
15th September 2008

Islamic sharia law courts in Britain are exploiting a little-known legal clause 
to make their verdicts officially binding under UK law in cases including 
divorce, financial disputes and even domestic violence. 


A new network of courts in five major cities is hearing cases where Muslims 
involved agree to be bound by traditional sharia law, and under the 1996 
Arbitration Act the court's decisions can then be enforced by the county courts 
or the High Court.

Officials behind the new system claim to have dealt with more than 100 cases 
since last summer, including six involving domestic violence which is a 
criminal rather than civil offence, and said they hoped to take over growing 
numbers of 'smaller' criminal cases in future.


The revelations sparked uproar yesterday, with warnings that the fundamental 
principle of equal treatment for all - the bedrock of British justice - was 
being gravely undermined.
Critics fear Britain's Islamic hard-liners will now try to make sharia law the 
dominant legal system in Muslim neighbourhoods, and warn that women often 
receive less favourable treatment at the hands of the traditional Islamic 
courts.

The issue erupted into a major controversy earlier this year after the 
Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams claimed publicly that formal 
recognition of sharia law 'seemed unavoidable', and Lord Chief Justice Lord 
Phillips gave his backing to the use of Islamic courts to deal with family, 
marital and financial disputes.

Sharia courts have operated unofficially for years among Britain's Muslim 
communities but until now their rulings could not be enforced, relying instead 
on parties agreeing voluntarily.

The Muslim Arbitration Tribunal panels, set up by lawyer Sheikh Faiz-ul-Aqtab 
Siddiqi, are now operating in London, Bradford, Manchester, Birmingham and 
Nuneaton, with more planned for Glasgow and Edinburgh.

Mr Siddiqi said: 'We realised that under the Arbitration Act we can make 
rulings which can be enforced by county and High Courts.

'The Act allows disputes to be resolved using alternatives like tribunals. This 
method is called alternative dispute resolution, which for Muslims is what the 
sharia courts are.'

Cases handled by the courts so far include Muslim divorce and inheritance to 
nuisance neighbours, he said. 


But as well as civil disputes they have also handled six cases of domestic 
violence.

In all six cases, he said, sharia judges ordered husbands to take anger 
management classes and mentoring from community elders, but issued no further 
punishment. 


All the women subsequently withdrew their complaints to the police, who halted 
investigations.

Mr Siddiqi claimed the advantage was that marriages were saved and couples 
given a second chance.

But critics fear Muslim women victims will be pressured into accepting a sharia 
court settlement, and husbands will escape with lighter punishments than in a 
mainstream criminal court.

In one recent inheritance dispute in Nuneaton, a Muslim man's estate was spit 
was between three daughters and two sons with each son receiving twice as much 
as each daughter - in keeping with sharia law.

In a mainstream court all siblings would have been treated equally.

Douglas Murray, the director of the Centre for Social Cohesion, condemned the 
latest development as 'appalling.''I don't think arbitration that is done by 
sharia should ever be endorsed or enforced by the British state.' 


Shadow home secretary Dominic Grieve said: 'These tribunals have no place in 
passing binding decisions in divorce or criminal justice hearings. 'Far from 
handling more criminal cases. They should be handling none at all. 'British law 
is absolute and must remain so.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1055764/Islamic-sharia-courts-Britain-legally-binding.html

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