MUSLIM radicals have
established their own draconian court systems in Britain
Since 05-06-07
April 30,2007
Paul Jeeves
http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/5795
Controversial Sharia courts have been set up in major [British] towns and cities
to impose Islamic law and enable Muslims to shun the legitimate British legal
system.
Last night religious leaders and politicians expressed outrage that Sharia law
is gaining an increasing foothold in our society.
Critics insisted that the Government is allowing a two-tier legal system to
flourish in the name of political correctness and that the authority of UK
justice is being undermined.
The Daily Express can reveal that one of the controversial courts has been set
up in the home town of the 7/7 London bombings ringleader.
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Mohammed Siddique Khan was responsible for the Edgware Road Circle Line
explosion which killed six people and injured 120. Our investigation has found
that the Sharia court system has been set up in the heart of Dewsbury, West
Yorkshire, and that it is a model for others across the country which are
operating outside the British legal process.
The Dewsbury court is called the Sharee Council – another term for Sharia – and
operates as a Muslim judiciary making decisions by which attendees must abide.
In many countries, hard-line interpretations of the Islamic law allow people to
be stoned to death, beheaded or have their limbs amputated.
Non-Muslims are excluded from the secretive court which is registered as a
charity to receive British tax benefits.
Although the court has no official legal standing, scales of justice adorn a
sign outside a former pub building which has been converted by the Islamic
Institute of Great Britain.
Last night the Sharia courts were blasted by both Christian and Muslim groups
for their non-democratic attempts to establish their legal system.
Mark Wallace, campaign manager of the Freedom Association said: “British
society must be one of free speech, free personal choice, democratic freedom and
fairness.
“If individual Muslims wish to inform their decisions by the teachings of Sharia,
that is fine, but they must do it within the structures of British law and they
must understand that sharia will never be acceptable as the legal system of the
UK.”
His views were echoed by the Muslim Council of Britain, whose spokesman Inayat
Bunglawala said: “We believe one legal code should apply for all citizens of the
UK. There is no place for multiple legal systems for people of different
religious or ethnic backgrounds.”
Dewsbury councillor Imtiaz Ameen, a Muslim, said: “Some people advocate total
Sharia law but you cannot have it being the case in any country that there is
one law for one and one law for another.”
Critics say the Government has not done enough to stop radical Muslim groups
establishing their brand of law.
Liberal thinkers in the Government claim that the law enables full-face
veil-wearing Muslim women who are afraid of British courts to gain justice the
“traditional way”.
But one insider told the Daily Express that the Sharia court, which is run from
the backroom of a Madrasa – an Islamic education centre – in Dewsbury is just
one of “dozens” operating in Asian communities. And a leading Muslim commentator
claimed similar courts exist in every major city across Britain.
The Madrasa – which is a former pub situated less than a mile from the one-time
home of London bombing mastermind Khan – sits as a court every other weekend and
hears up to 10 cases a day.
Four Muslim scholars, who have spent their life studying and preaching the
Koran, sit in judgment on an array of cases alongside a Muslim solicitor whose
role is to advise on the implications of their rulings in British law.
The operation is headed by prominent scholar Sheikh Yaqub Munshi. Accounts for
the Dewsbury court’s parent company the Islamic Research Institute of Great
Britain, show that it was registered in Dewsbury as a charity in 1996 with the
ethos of promoting the advancement of Islamic religion and education in the
United Kingdom.
Charitable status allows the organisation to claim tax relief and apply for
government grants and trustee funding.
Between April 1999 and April 2004 its gross annual turnover rocketed from £2,500
to above £177,000. At the end of the last financial year it recorded total funds
of £255,000 but it is not known if or how it charges for use of the service.
At the moment, the leaders insist they only deal with civil matters such as
Muslim divorces, wedding dowries and asset sharing.
But the secretive Muslim-only nature of the dealings will provoke fears that
radical Sharia law could be allowed
to spread across the Muslim population. The source said: “These courts take the
law into their own hands and dish out punishment for bad behaviour.
“I have not heard of physical punishments being used but those in the wrong are
often ordered to pay compensation. Many who have no respect for British law are
the most stringent observers of Sharia law.”
Sheikh Yaqub admitted that introducing Sharia law into the UK has been his goal
since moving to Britain from Pakistan in the 1960s.
But he insisted its main aim is to help repressed women who are trapped in bad
or violent marriages and who dare not use British law.
He said: “Ever since I arrived here in the 1960s there has been a case of women
being forced to get married, others forced to get married, but unhappy
afterwards. Until now there was no organisation which could Islamically solve
their problems.”
Sharia is derived from the Arabic translation Sariah and outlines Islamic law
according to the Koran. The term means “way” or “path” and gives the Islamic
framework within which people must regulate their lives according to the Muslim
faith.
After the Sharia court has ruled in judgment, solicitors process matters
officially through UK courts on their clients’ behalf.
Dr Patrick Sookhdeo, of the Institute for the Study of Islam and Christianity,
said: “Sharia courts now operate in most larger cities, with different sectarian
and ethnic groups operating their own courts that cater to their specific needs
according to their tradition.”
Philip Davies, the Tory MP for Shipley, said: “I am absolutely appalled and
find the prospect of such courts totally terrifying. Places like this should be
closed down or else everybody will want to establish their own courts.
“How many more places like this are there in the UK? Who knows where it could
all end? It simply cannot be tolerated.”