Tentunya si arra_s sbg orang Islam yg baik akan bilang bhw Islam didiskriminasi 
di Inggris krn ga bisa make hukum syariat dlm kasus perceraian ini di mana 
cewek yg dicerai diputuskan hrs dpt uangdr bekas suaminya. 

Nurut Islam, cewek yg dicerai itu udah dihormati dgn boleh tetap memiliki mahar 
yg didptnya krn udah diembat oleh bekas suaminya, paling2 dikasih pesangon 
sekedarnya unt hiburan. Beda dgn hukum kafir laknatuloh yg mengharuskan si 
cewek dpt harta bekas suaminya.

Hukum harta gono gini ini jg diterapkan di Indonesia, makanya pejihad2 Islam 
mau ngeganti hukum bejad ini dgn hukum auloh spy cewek2 bisa lbh terhormat dgn 
kalo dicerai pake 3 kata, si cewek ga dpt apa2 lagi selain apa yg jadi haknya, 
yaitu mahar.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2179041/You-use-sharia-law-divorce-deal-Muslim-hospital-consultant-told-pay-ex-wife-maintenance-despite-claims-owes-Islamic-rules.html#ixzz21hmJea7Z


You can't use sharia law in divorce deal: Muslim hospital consultant told to 
pay ex-wife maintenance despite claims he owes her nothing 
under Islamic rules

        * Dr Zaid Al-Saffar told he must follow 'the rule in this country' 

        * Ordered to pay £60,000 to his former wife, academic Hanan Al-Saffar
        * He felt the payments were illegitimate according to Islamic culture
        * Claims: 'Family law in this country is biased against Muslim people’ 
By Steve Doughty
PUBLISHED: 23:04 GMT, 25 July 2012  | UPDATED: 23:58 GMT, 25 July 2012 

Read more: 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2179041/You-use-sharia-law-divorce-deal-Muslim-hospital-consultant-told-pay-ex-wife-maintenance-despite-claims-owes-Islamic-rules.html#ixzz21lCCLGOG


A Muslim hospital consultant was told yesterday that he must pay his ex-wife 
maintenance even though under 
Islamic rules he believes he owes her nothing.

A judge told Dr Zaid Al-Saffar that he must follow ‘the rule in this country’ 
and share his money.


The Appeal Court decision means Dr Al-Saffar must pay £60,000 to his former 
wife, academic Hanan Al-Saffar.


The ruling sounded a warning to Muslim couples who believe their marriages 
are ordered according to sharia law and agree to be bound by Islamic 
courts.


Lord Justice Ward told Dr Al-Saffar: ‘The rule in this country is that you 
share and the starting point is equal division. 


‘You came out of the marriage without having made your wife any substantial 
capital payment.’ 


He added: ‘Life is sometimes hard; do not be consumed with bitterness.’ 


But Dr Al-Saffar said after the case: ‘By playing the system and pretending to 
be a victim she got everything, which I think is totally unfair. 

‘Family law in this country is biased against Muslim people.’ 


The consultant rheumatologist at Scarborough Hospital in North Yorkshire, 
who is also the head of the Islamic Society in the resort town, was 
married for eight years, and the couple had two children. 


The marriage was formalised following the Islamic tradition of Mahr, under 
which the groom pays a gift to his bride.


Because of this, his wife had signed away her share of the couple’s home in 
Belvedere Road, in Scarborough. 


Dr Al-Saffar also assumed he had no 
obligation to make maintenance payments, and that, following Islamic 
practice, his former wife’s family would support her.

However, after the marriage fell apart in 2008, a county court judge ordered 
him to pay £60,000 to his wife in a hearing to settle the legal terms of 
their break-up. 


Dr Al-Saffar made payments for only four months but then contested the decision.

In
the Appeal Court, he told Lord Justice Ward that he had stopped paying 
because he had heard his former wife had inherited £250,000 from her 
father and had become ‘very, very well off’.

Dr Al-Saffar, who represented himself, told the court: ‘I have nothing but 
respect for the court’s order, but I only stopped paying because all 
her family were telling me she’s got millions. She doesn’t need it.’ 

But the judge said the doctor had 
been determined not to pay because ‘he felt the payments were 
illegitimate or illegal according to Islamic culture’. 


Lord Justice Ward said: ‘The husband has kept the whole of the capital in 
the marital home and the wife has not received any of it. 

‘In those circumstances the order for spousal maintenance was a perfectly 
proper and fair order to make.’ 


The judge added: ‘The husband has to try to understand that inherited 
wealth is not available for distribution, especially when it comes in 
after or shortly before the breakdown of the marriage. 


'That would not reduce the husband’s obligation to make a proper contribution 
to his wife.’


‘I must dismiss this application,’ Lord Justice Ward said.


An unknown number of Muslim couples take their family disputes to sharia 
tribunals, usually run under the umbrella of local mosques. There are 
said to be around 85 operating in Britain.


They operate voluntarily, but critics say women may be disadvantaged if they 
agree to accept Islamic rules.


At present, if a sharia court settles a marriage dispute, an official law 
court has to approve the arrangement before the divorce is finalised.


The judge must decide whether it is reasonable and ensure neither party is 
disadvantaged. 


But agreements are submitted to the family court on a form just two pages long. 
The couple do not need to attend court.


The great majority are approved and critics say this process can amount to no 
more than rubber-stamping.


Four years ago Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams caused controversy 
when he said that full acceptance of sharia courts ‘seems unavoidable’.

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



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