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President approves Sharia laws

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ISLAMABAD, Feb 15: President Asif Ali Zardari has given a go-ahead to the NWFP government to enforce Sharia laws in the Malakand region, including Swat.

“The president’s approval was sought because the provincial government cannot make any amendment to laws in Malakand without his approval,” sources said.

Provincial Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain claimed on Sunday that the president had promulgated an ordinance to enforce Sharia in Malakand.

President’s spokesman Farhatullah Babar said the official version of the presidency would be issued after a meeting between the NWFP government and leaders of the TNSM to be held on Monday.
President approves Sharia laws -DAWN - Top Stories; February 16, 2009
 
Pakistan imposes Islamic law in Taliban stronghold

Government brings in sharia courts in Malakand in attempt to placate extremists

Pakistan is to impose Islamic law in a vast region of the north-west called Malakand in an attempt to placate extremists, even as President Asif Zardari warns that they are "trying to take over the state".

Pakistani Taliban militants who are in control of the Swat valley in the region announced a ceasefire tonight, reacting to the government's agreement to bring in sharia courts.

Malakand is part of North West Frontier province, a regular part of Pakistan, not the wild tribal area, which runs along the Afghan border.

Critics warned that the new sharia regulations represented a capitulation to the extremists' demands, and that it would be difficult to stop hardliners elsewhere in the country from demanding that their areas also come under Islamic law.

"This is definitely a surrender," said Khadim Hussain of the Aryana Institute for Regional Research and Advocacy, a thinktank in Islamabad. "If you keep treating a community as something different from the rest of the country, it will isolate them."

Javed Iqbal, a retired judge, speaking on Pakistani television, said: "It means that there is not one law in the country. It will disintegrate this way. If you concede to this, you will go on conceding."

The deal, set to be announcedtomorrow, follows talks between the government and a local Islamic leader, Sufi Muhammad, who once led hundreds of men to fight alongside the Taliban in Afghanistan against the US-led coalition. He was freed by the Pakistani authorities after the restoration of democracy last year, in a move heavily criticised by Washington.

In an interview broadcast todayby the US television channel CBS, Zardari admitted that the future of Pakistan was in grave danger from the Taliban, who are present in "huge parts" of the country. Islamabad is under severe pressure from the US, Britain and other western allies to rein in the extremists, who fight both in Pakistan and Afghanistan and play host to al-Qaida.

Zardari said: "We are aware of the fact [the Taliban are] trying to take over the state of Pakistan. We're fighting for the survival of Pakistan. "

Zardari's wife, the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, was killed by Islamic extremists in 2007. "I lost my wife, my children's mother," the president said. "It's important to stop them and make sure that it doesn't happen again and they don't take over our way of life."

Hajji Adeel, a senior member of the Awami National party which runs the government of North West Frontier province that undertook the negotiations with Muhammad, said the main aim of the new law was to speed up the justice system. Under the new regulations, criminal cases would be disposed of within four months and civil cases in six months, he said.

The creaky colonial-era legal system in Pakistan means that cases drag on for years, sometimes decades, a major source of anger for ordinary people. "If six months ago, this [sharia] had started working in Swat, the intensity of the terror there would have been much less," said Adeel.

The ANP a proudly secular party, has come under sustained attack from the Taliban, and last week one of its members in the provincial parliament was killed by a roadside bomb.

The new law is a relatively mild form of sharia, with the aim of undermining support for the extremists and their populist demand for speedy Islamic justice. Religious experts, known as a qazi, will sit in the court, alongside a regular judge, to ensure that the rulings are in compliance with Islam.

However, many believe that the Taliban will not ultimately accept this form of Islamic law. Muhammad is not part of the Taliban and it is unclear how far his influence goes.

The Swat Taliban's ceasefire, described as a "goodwill gesture", will only last for 10 days, while it decides what to do. Muhammad has undertaken to tour the area to convince the militants to put down their arms. In Swat, the Taliban have for months been enforcing their brutal version of Islamic justice, which includes public floggings and summary executions. The Taliban are also entrenched across the tribal area.

Pakistan imposes Islamic law in Taliban stronghold | World news | guardian.co.uk
 
Would this imply two types of laws in the same country ?

Just for info, what are the maj diff between Sharia laws & that in vogue in Pakistan ?

Which are the other countries where sharia laws are in force ?
 
Would this imply two types of laws in the same country ?

Just for info, what are the maj diff between Sharia laws & that in vogue in Pakistan ?

Which are the other countries where sharia laws are in force ?
Sadui Arabai..anyway i don't see any problem with this.As long as the people demand Shari law then enforce Sharia law in those areas.
 
Would this imply two types of laws in the same country ?

Just for info, what are the maj diff between Sharia laws & that in vogue in Pakistan ?

Which are the other countries where sharia laws are in force ?

shariya laws are the way our beloved Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) decided about any issue, it also means the same reward and punishment system of our beloved Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him), the present constitution of Pakistan does not follow the Islamic system of laws completely.
 
shariya laws are the way our beloved Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) decided about any issue, it also means the same reward and punishment system of our beloved Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him), the present constitution of Pakistan does not follow the Islamic system of laws completely.

Well sharia law's Can be misinterpreted by the mullahs.. Thats what happend in Afghanistan.
 
Well sharia law's Can be misinterpreted by the mullahs.. Thats what happend in Afghanistan.

It will be enforced by government of Pakistan not mullahs. There is no self-interpretation. It will help in speedy trials and easy justice.

The laws were practiced in the past when Swat was an independent state till 1969 and people of Swat were happy with that.
 
Not that I have a particular interest in the Sharia Law .. all I am thinking is that one nation in its entirely should have one law. If Pakistan has common law, then it should exist for all areas that constitute Pakistan. If its Sharia, then all of Pakistan should have Sharia !

Where does the buck stop then, Different laws, different travel requirements , visa ,currency, taxation matters etc. The problem , I can see is that one Pakistani area wants to assert its own identity apart from and not common to Pakistan. This can not be good for the nation !!
 
NWFP govt., TNSM ink Nizam-e-Adal Accord

Updated at: 1445 PST, Monday, February 16, 2009
NWFP govt., TNSM ink Nizam-e-Adal Accord PESHAWAR: The North West Frontier Province (NWFP) government and Tahrik-e-Nifaz Shariat Muhammadi, after finalization of an accord for the enforcement of Nizam-e-Adal in Malakand, have inked a Nizam-e-Adal accord at the end of the Jirga here on Monday.

Following the Jirga, NWFP Chief Minister, Amir Haider Khan Hoti, who was presiding over the Jirga, told the media that the enforcement of Nizam-e-Adal was a historic moment and it would come in force forthwith.

"Today an agreement has been signed between the government of NWFP and Maulana Sufi Mohammed," provincial information minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain told reporters here.

"All laws against sharia will be abolished and sharia will be enforced under this justice system," he added.

The agreement will cover Malakand area, one of the districts of NWFP, which includes the Swat valley.

"It is my hope that the armed people will disarm themselves, give up the path of violence and work for restoration of peace in Swat," NWFP chief minister, Amir Haider Hoti said.

Twenty-nine delegates from the Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Sharia, led by Maulana Muhammad Alam, attended the meeting today.

US, NATO and Afghan officials have criticised previous peace deals in Pakistan, saying that they have led to an increase in suicide attacks on international and Afghan forces across the border in Afghanistan.
 
Not that I have a particular interest in the Sharia Law .. all I am thinking is that one nation in its entirely should have one law. If Pakistan has common law, then it should exist for all areas that constitute Pakistan. If its Sharia, then all of Pakistan should have Sharia !

Where does the buck stop then, Different laws, different travel requirements , visa ,currency, taxation matters etc. The problem , I can see is that one Pakistani area wants to assert its own identity apart from and not common to Pakistan. This can not be good for the nation !!



It is for the people of Pakistan to decide what they want not someone from other countries. It is laughable when non-Pakistani start imposing their likes and dislikes on us.


The promulgation of sharia law has been approved by the elected federal government of Pakistan therefore no non-Pakistani should have any right to speak up for us.

Pakistan is an Islamic country but the irony is we have never had any law based on Islamic teachings. The judicial system here is based on hundreds of years' old British laws which has failed to provide
 
Would this imply two types of laws in the same country ?

Just for info, what are the maj diff between Sharia laws & that in vogue in Pakistan ?

Which are the other countries where sharia laws are in force ?

Just look at the Middle East and North African Muslim Countries.
 
I think this is very good news because it will expose the Taliban if they decide to bring in other ideas now lets see how it pans out.
 
One country and two different laws.:tsk:
GOP has failed miserably and IMO should resign, let some one else come who can really take care of the mess and not just surrender to the demands of just anyone who takes up arms against the writ of the state.
 
By scumbing to the demands of taliban, Pakistan have set a precedent, and shows the weaknes of the entire establishment..!!! Hope it doesnt get taken over by taliban..!!!!
 
By scumbing to the demands of taliban, Pakistan have set a precedent, and shows the weaknes of the entire establishment..!!! Hope it doesnt get taken over by taliban..!!!!

Not Taliban. The talks are held with TNSM not Fazlullah.


I said this before as well the elected government of Pakistan has approved it after much deliberation.

If the system delivers then why not to impose it across Pakistan.

People of Swat also demanded it therefore there should be no grinning by anyone. The decision is already hurting terrorists and they are looking for excuses to strike even after this.
 

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