Refleksi : Apa komentar para pakar ilmu surgawi  NKRI dan MUI terhadap 
keputusan di Mesir tentang niqab?

http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=MjA3Nzc4OTg=

Headline News
Clerics back niqab curbs
Published Date: December 23, 2009 

CAIRO: Egypt's three most prominent religious leaders have backed a government 
ban on the niqab, or full face veil, in dormitories and examinations, saying it 
had no basis in Islam. In October, Sheikh Mohamed Sayed Tantawi, the head of 
Al-Azhar, a major seat of Islamic learning, issued a religious edict barring 
the niqab in Azhar-run all-girl schools and in dormitories.

The minister of higher education subsequently banned it in university 
examinations. "Al Azhar is not against the niqab but against its misuse," the 
government-run Al-Akhbar newspaper cited Tantawi yesterday as saying. He said 
it was a social habit that had no roots in sharia (Islamic law). Earlier this 
week, Tantawi joined Mufti Ali Gomaa, Egypt's highest religious legal 
authority, and Hamdy Zakzouk, minister of religious endowments, in a forum on 
the niqab. Other religious leaders also attended.

Egypt's government has long been wary of Islamist thinking and in the 1990s 
crushed Islamists seeking to set up a religious state. It also is keen to quell 
opposition ahead of parliamentary elections next year and a later presidential 
vote. The forum was organised after a Cairo court ruled this month that no 
administrative body or other body could ban the niqab, media reports said.

Minister of Higher Education Hani Hilal said earlier this week he was concerned 
some people used the niqab to shield immodesty and crime, including girls who 
take school tests in place of colleagues. Many remain unconvinced, however. 
Al-Said Abdel Maksoud Askar, a Muslim Brotherhood member of parliament, 
described Hilal's concerns as illegitimate excuses. "Checking her identity is a 
very easy task," he told Reuters. "Any girl is free to wear the niqab as long 
as she understands that when asked to reveal her face ... she should do so 
accordingly," Sheikh Mahmoud Ashour, a prominent member of Al Azhar's Islamic 
Research Centre, said.

The number of girls wearing the niqab, though still not the norm, has been 
rising. Many have protested against what they claim is discrimination on 
university campuses and have launched petitions to reverse the ban. More than 
13 religious scholars have found that the face veil has no substantial roots in 
Islam, but rather can be considered a "form of extremism", the official MENA 
news agency cited Tantawi as saying. - Reuters 

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