Rfeleksi : Apakah tidak lebih bagus ganti badan legislatif dengan MUI, supaya 
sekali saja dibuat peraturan dan negara menghemat  ongkos. Siapa yang tidak 
turut peraturan MUI di  celaka mati, di dunia seberang langsung masuk neraka.  


http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/mui-called-on-to-issue-helmet-fatwa/359756

February 20, 2010 
Anita Rachman

MUI Called on to Issue Helmet Fatwa

If the law doesn't work, will a religious edict be more effective in ensuring 
motorcyclists stay safe on the roads? One community group thinks it will. 

The Road Safety Association on Friday called on the Indonesian Council of Ulema 
(MUI) to issue a fatwa, or religious edict, to make helmets compulsory for 
motorcyclists, in the hopes of reducing the number of casualties from road 
accidents. 

The idea behind the push is that by making it haram, or forbidden in Islam, to 
ride a motorbike without a helmet, people will be less inclined to break the 
law for fear of committing a sin. 

Fatwas issued by the MUI are generally considered as moral guidance, as opposed 
to being legally binding. 

Rio Octaviano, chairman of the RSA, told the Jakarta Globe on Friday that many 
motorists paid little attention to traffic regulations, particularly on the use 
of helmets. 

As a result, Rio said, motorcycle accidents had claimed many lives. 

"Some people who use motorcycles do not really follow the legal regulations, 
but for some reason they listen to what the ulema say," Rio said. 

"That is why we went to the MUI. The fatwa is our last-ditch effort to ask 
people to keep their helmets on while on the road." 

According to statistics from the RSA, over the past 10 years an average of 32 
people died every day on the roads - and 90 percent of those were 
motorcyclists. 

Data from the Transportation Ministry says that 30,000 people die each year on 
the roads, and about 70 percent are motorcyclists. 

Suripno, director of road safety at the ministry, said the ministry had been 
promoting helmet use since 2006. "We also asked people to put helmets on their 
children and babies," he said. 

Ichwan Sam, the MUI's secretary general, said the RSA's efforts were 
commendable. 

He said the effort to keep people safe on the roads deserved be supported. The 
matter, however, would still have to go before a meeting of the MUI's fatwa 
commission, he added. 

Ichwan said many road-safety issues required many parts of society to work 
together to reduce the number of road casualties, not just the government. 

The ministry, however, said that its safety campaigns were already doing 
enough. 

"Please don't mix a thing like this with religion," Suripno said.











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