Hehehe.... mufti Saudi mengumumkan bhw anak 10 thn bisa diembat tanpa seijin 
si anak.
Tentunya si mufti ini membuat keputusan sesuai dgn ajaran Islam yg 
menunjukkan Islam itu emang agama yg benar unt pedophile. 
Ga heran kalo Islam protestan, Islam agnostik atau Islam abangan ogah 
ninggalin Islam, krn bisa jadi pedophile dgn halal di Islam.
 
http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3073/saudi-fatwa-ban-christian-churches
 
Top Saudi Cleric: Ban Christian Churches in  Arabia
Let Girls Marry at 10
by Irfan  Al-Alawi
May 23, 2012 at 4:00 am
"How could the grand mufti issue a fatwa of such  importance behind the back of 
his king?"
> 
In late April of this year, the Wahhabi grand mufti of Saudi Arabia,  Sheikh 
Abdul Aziz Ibn Abdullah Aal Ash-Sheikh, who controls all Sunni Muslim  clerics 
in the desert kingdom, announced that girls could be forced into  marriage at 
age 10 or 12, without their consent, by contractual arrangement  between 
families.
 
Aal Ash-Sheikh delivered this opinion in an address to faculty at the  Imam 
Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University in Riyadh – known to ordinary  Saudis as 
"the terrorist factory." Aal Ash-Sheikh said, "Our mothers and  grandmothers 
got married when they were barely 12. Good upbringing makes a  girl ready to 
perform all marital duties at that age."
 
The Saudi chief cleric then proceeded to conflict with repeated promises  of 
the Saudi King, Abdullah, to foster interfaith respect and dialogue, by  
calling, in mid-March, for the destruction of all Christian churches in the  
Arabian Peninsula. Responding to a query in Kuwait by Muslim clerics  
affiliated with the "Revival of Islamic Heritage Society," favorable to  
Wahhabism, Aal Ash-Sheikh based his argument on a weakly-transmitted hadith,  
or oral commentary on the life of Muhammad, in which the Prophet allegedly  
mandated that there should not be "two religions" in Arabia.
 
"How could the grand mufti issue a fatwa of such importance behind the  back of 
his king? We see a contradiction between the dialogue being  practiced, the 
efforts of the king and those of his top mufti," said leaders  of the Catholic 
Bishops' Conference in Vienna, where, with the cooperation  of Austria and 
Spain, Saudi foreign minister Saud al-Faisal had inaugurated  the "King 
Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz International Centre for Interreligious and  
Intercultural Dialogue" in 2011.
 
Aal Ash-Sheikh owes his position to his lineal descent from the 18th century 
religious ideologue, Muhammad Ibn Abd Al-Wahhab, after whom the  
ultra-fundamentalist, ultra-exclusivist Wahhabi sect – the official and sole  
recognized Islamic interpretation in Saudi Arabia – is named. The family of  
Ibn Abd Al-Wahhab has, for generations, intermarried with the royal Al-Saud  
clan. Along with their claims to a "pure Islam" imitative of the Prophet  
Muhammad, Wahhabis are known for their violent hatred of spiritual Sufism,  of 
Shia Muslims, and for their hostility to non-Muslims. It must be  emphasized 
that Wahhabi shariah is new, representing a break with  traditional Muslim 
jurisprudence and a radical innovation in Islamic law.
 
In Muslim lands and Muslim minority communities around the world, radical  
Islamist tendencies following, or imitating, Wahhabism have gained new  energy 
in the aftermath of the faded "Arab Spring." As the pro-democracy  
mobilizations in Arab lands have resulted instead in victories for the  radical 
Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia, Morocco, and Egypt, and with the  increasing 
prominence of radical groups in Syria, Libya and Yemen, Islamist  victories 
have coincided with a new offensive among South Asian Muslims by  Deobandis, 
inspirers of the Taliban, and allied with the Saudi Wahhabis.
 
In Nigeria, a similarly extremist, Wahhabi-oriented group, the "Boko  Haram" 
[literally, "Western Education is a Sin"] has spread terror,  especially 
targeting Christians, across the Muslim north.
 
According to the British Broadcasting Corporation, "Boko Haram" has  murdered 
1,000 people since its appearance in the country in 2009; is  crossing 
Nigeria's borders into the neighbouring state of Chad, and  threatening Niger 
and Cameroon – as well as having links with Al-Qaida in  the regional branch of 
the terror-force founded by the late Osama Bin Laden,  which claims the entire 
Islamic Maghreb, or western North Africa,
 
Nigerian Islamist fanatics have demonstrated two features in common with  Saudi 
Wahhabism: hatred of Christians and contempt for women. The contempt  for women 
is exemplified by marriages to underage females by the former  governor of 
Zamfara State in northwestern Nigeria, and now a federal  senator, known as 
Sani: Alhaji Ahmad Sani Yariman Bakura.
 
Representatives of two other Sharia states, Saudi Arabia and Sudan,  appeared 
with Sani when he announced the imposition of a new legal system of  Wahhabi 
law in Zamfara in 2009 [Radical Islam's Rules: The Worldwide  Spread of Extreme 
Shari'a Law, by Paul Marshall, Freedom House,  Washington DC, 2005]. Following 
the Saudi paradigm in focusing on standards  for public conduct, Sani created a 
religious morals militia, the "Joint  Islamic Aid Group" or "yanagaji," similar 
to the Saudi "mutawiyin" or morals  patrols. The adoption of Wahhabi Sharia law 
in Zamfara included a ban on  trade in alcohol, movie houses and video sales, a 
prohibition on women  riding motorcycles, and gender segregation in public 
conveyances – all  strictures enforced by the "yanagaji," who "arrest" alleged 
violators and  hand them over to the police.
 
Sani, it was disclosed in 2010 – in violation of the 2003 Nigerian Child  
Rights Act, which bans betrothal or marriage of girls under the age of 18 –  
had also apparently paid USD $100,000 to marry an unnamed 13-year old  Egyptian 
girl, reported to be the daughter of Sani's Egyptian driver, in a  wedding 
celebrated at the national mosque of Abuja, the Nigerian capital.
 
Local media noted that Sani had divorced one of his four wives to make  room 
for the Egyptian girl in a wedding that would have been illegal in  Egypt, 
where the "bride" would be considered a minor.
 
"What we are concerned with," the President of the Women's Medical  Association 
and Nigerian women's advocate, Mma Wokocha, told the BBC, "is  that our minors, 
the girl child, should be allowed to mature, before going  into marriage…. This 
very evil act should not be seen to be perpetrated by  one of our distinguished 
legislators."
 
Representatives of the United Nations condemned the marriage; the  
International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol) told its Nigerian  office 
it would conduct an examination of the case, and the Nigerian Senate  was 
charged with investigating Sani's wedding to the Egyptian 13-year old.  Sani 
had earlier been accused, in 2006, of marrying a girl of 15, but  Nigeria's 
National Agency for Prohibition of Traffic in Persons and Other  Related 
Matters announced in 2010 that it lacked evidence to file a  complaint against 
Sani, and shifted responsibility for the inquiry to the  country's attorney 
general. No legal proceeding against the Nigerian senator  has been sustained.
 
Although Saudi Arabia is, of course, different from Egypt or Nigeria –  
notwithstanding the signatures of all three to the UN Convention on the  Rights 
of the Child (CRC) and Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of  
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) – the Saudi chief cleric, Aal  Ash-Sheikh, 
has apparently has had no comment on an issue raised in the  case: the 
physiological and psychological capacity of female children to  fulfill the 
demands of marriage. Islamic radicals simply claim that in  approving such 
relationships they emulate Muhammad's marriage to the  allegedly-underaged 
Aisha, although Aisha's age at the time of her marriage  to Muhammad cannot be 
confirmed in any contemporary records. More  importantly, various practices of 
the Arabs at the time of Islam's emergence  have since been abandoned. With the 
coming of Islam to Arabia, the terrible  habit of female infanticide was 
abandoned and the right of women to divorce  was
 introduced.
 
Aside from condemnation by Christian representatives, Aal Ash-Sheikh's  
"advice" calling for the destruction of all Christian churches was rejected  by 
the Kuwait Minister of Religious Endowments, Jamal Al-Shahab. The Kuwaiti  
official affirmed that "the constitution of Kuwait guarantees its citizens  
[freedom of] religion and worship… Demolishing churches and forbidding the  
members of the Christian community from worshipping [according to their  
belief] contravenes the state's laws and regulations." Aal Ash-Sheikh's  stance 
was also condemned by Al-Azhar, the Sunni University in Cairo, and by  Mehmet 
Görmez, head of the Turkish Religious Affairs Directorate (Diyanet).
 
Except for the closed Islamic cities of Mecca and Medina, the Arabian  
Peninsula has been shared with Christians and Jews throughout most of  Islamic 
history. A shuttered Christian church and graveyard exist in Jedda,  the Saudi 
commercial capital, near Mecca. Jews have a long history of  residence in Yemen 
and Hadhramawt, in southern Arabia, as well as in  Bahrain, where a synagogue 
still functions. Christian churches, Hindu  temples and Buddhist shrines are 
found in Kuwait, Bahrain, the United Arab  Emirates, Qatar, Oman, and Yemen. 
Some 3.5 million Christians live in the  Gulf countries, including indigenous 
Arab Christians, Catholic migrant  workers from the Philippines, India, and 
South Korea, and Western expatriate  technicians and business representatives.
 
Despite widespread claims that King Abdullah and Aal Ash-Sheikh are  close, the 
Wahhabi clerical caste has always resisted even the most limited  reforms. 
Rumors that Aal Ash-Sheikh's announcement was meant to undermine  the position 
of King Abdullah cannot be excluded; however, to this day Aal  Ash-Sheikh's 
opinion on Christian churches in the Arabian Peninsula has  never released or 
publicized anywhere inside Saudi Arabia.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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