Yg bisa ngeluarkan fatwa itu adalah ahli Islam, bukan orang sembarangan. Jadi 
fatwa di bawah ini tentunya berdasarkan ajaran Islam, bukan cuma sekedar kaing2 
kayak anjing kejepit buntut.
 
Dan faktanya, memang banyak orang Islam yg melakukan apa yg disebutkan di 
fatwa tsb.
 
http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3105/pakistan-fatwas-against-women
 
Pakistan: Fatwas Against Women
by Anna  Mahjar-Barducci
June 12, 2012 at 4:00 am
 
Women using a cell phone will have acid thrown in her face." — Maulana Abdul 
Haleem, Islamic cleric.
 
Fatwas against women's rights are being issued on an almost daily basis  in 
Pakistan now. One of the most outspoken misogynist clerics, Maulana Abdul  
Haleem, a former Islamist legislator, recently issued a fatwa against formal  
education for women and another fatwa calling for the abduction of  non-married 
female NGO workers. In May, Maulana Abdul Haleem also justified  to the media 
killing women in the name of "honor" as a "local custom and a  religious 
practice." In a similar tone, a Pakistani cleric issued a fatwa  justifying 
acid attacks on women who use cell phones. A list of recent  fatwas issued in 
Pakistan includes:
 
Fatwa: Women Using a Cell Phone Will Have Acid Thrown in Her Face
 
In an article published in the Pakistani media outlet The Express  Tribune, 
Pakistani feminist writer Faouzia Saeed reported that in  Noshki, a town in the 
region of Balochistan, a fatwa was announced in a  mosque on May 11, stating 
that any woman using a cell phone will have acid  thrown in her face.
 
Fatwa: Formal Education for Women Is Un-Islamic
 
The Express Tribune also reports that Maulana Abdul Haleem, former  legislator 
and member of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazlur Rehman, a religious  conservative 
party in Pakistan, came up with several misogynist fatwas.
 
In the beginning of May, the nonagenarian Islamist leader launched a  fatwa 
stating that formal education for women is un-Islamic and reprimanding  parents 
who send their daughters to school. In the fatwa, Maulana Abdul  Haleem asks 
parents to terminate their daughters' education, threatening  that those who 
keep sending their daughters to school will be burn in hell.
 
When approached for comments, The Express Tribune reports, Maulana  Abdul 
Haleem stressed that according to Islamic tradition, it is forbidden  for girls 
to receive degrees and certificates in a "secular education  system," as formal 
education paves the way for girls to enter into the job  market. "When they 
permit their women to work," he said, "they give them a  free hand to mix with 
na-mehrum [men they are not related to  by blood] – by doing so, the girl's 
father, brother or husband become dayoos [someone who accepts female family 
members' wrongdoings, and  hence liable to be condemned to hell] in the eye of 
shariah law." Maulana  Abdul Haleem also stated that women should stay at home 
and look after their  children and family members.
 
The Express Tribune reports that the cleric claimed that 97% of  girls schools 
in the Kohistan district, in North-West Pakistan, were closed,  and the few 
girls that were enrolled only visited their schools to collect  cooking oil, 
which the Education Department was distributing with the  support of foreign 
donors.
 
The idea that women should not receive a formal education is widespread  among 
Pakistani Islamists. In April, Islamist militants bombed a government  girls' 
middle school in the north of the country.
 
Fatwa: Abduction of Female NGO Workers
 
Maulana Abdul Haleem recently issued another fatwa, targeting female NGO  
workers in the Kohistan district, in North-West Pakistan, again according to 
The Express Tribune. It reports that the fatwa declares all NGOs  working in 
the region as "hubs of immodesty." "Some women from these NGOs  visit our 
houses frequently, mobilizing naïve Kohistani women to follow  their agenda in 
the name of health and hygiene education," he said, adding  that this is 
"unacceptable to Kohistani culture." He then stated that  married female NGO 
workers should go back to their husbands, whereas the  unmarried ones will be 
forcibly wedded to Kohistani men to make them stay at  home. "If women working 
in NGOs enter Kohistan, we won't spare them and  solemnize their nikkah 
(marriage) with local men,", he said.
 
Reactions to Fatwas
 
Pakistani civil society reacted in the media against these fatwas. In  
particular, several petitions were launched on blogs and on social networks,  
but on the political level, no initiative has been taken.
 
Pakistani columnist Tazeen Javed complained about both the government's  
inaction and that issuing fatwas has became a normal Pakistani habit.  
"[Maulana Abdul Haleem] a former legislator issues fatwas during a Friday  
sermon inciting hatred against a group of people [NGO workers] and declaring  
the constitutional rights of getting an education for half of the population  
forbidden, and no one, barring a few bloggers and tweeters, raises even an  
eyebrow. […] Fatwas are so commonplace that even a power utility company  
resorted to seeking one a few years back to get people to pay for their  
electricity. Since that utility is still burdened with thousands of unpaid  
bills, we know how useless that fatwa turned out to be," Tazeen Javed wrote,  
adding that Pakistan can ill-afford adventurism of any kind but that most  
dangerous is the practice of resorting to fatwas to get a point across. "Not  
only does this breed a narrow and rigid view of issues, it
 also leaves no  room for dialogue, debate and consultation, making us an 
increasingly  'stunted' and intolerant society."
 
Related Topics:  Pakistan  |  Anna Mahjar-Barducci

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