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Williams provokes row over sharia law
by Paul Handley
![]() Taking the stand? The Archbishop of Canterbury PA |
| THE ARCHBISHOP of Canterbury sparked off an impassioned debate about the adoption of sharia law in the UK on Thursday, when he suggested in a lecture that some form of accommodation was desirable. In an BBC interview before the lecture, Dr Williams said: “Certain provisions of sharia are already recognised in our society and under our law; so it’s not as if we’re bringing in an alien and rival system. . . There is a place for finding what would be a constructive accommodation with some aspects of Muslim law, as we already do with some kinds of aspects of other religious law.” He made it clear that there was no question of adopting the extreme punishments or treatment of women found in some Islamic states. Dr Williams’s view was quickly countered by politicians. The Home Office minister Tony McNulty said: “To ask us to fundamentally change the rule of law and to adopt sharia law, I think, is fundamentally wrong.” Sayeeda Warsi, the Conservative shadow minister for community cohesion and social action, was quoted in The Guardian as saying: “Freedom under the law allows respect for some religious practices. But let’s be clear: all British citizens must be subject to British laws developed through Parliament and the courts.” Trevor Phillips, chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, said: “The Archbishop’s thinking is muddled and unhelpful. Raising this idea in this way will give fuel to anti-Muslim extremism, and dismay everyone working towards a more integrated society.” Dr Williams’s views were contained in a long lecture to legal academics at the Temple Festival at the Royal Courts of Justice on Thursday evening. His essential points were that: sharia law was not a monolithic legal system; that it was possible to imagine two overlapping legal codes; and that the concept of a universal legality was poorly understood. The lecture in detail DR WILLIAMS began by criticising sensational reporting of sharia cases. “What most people think they know of sharia is that it is repressive towards women and wedded to archaic and brutal punishments.” He quoted the Muslim scholar Tariq Ramadan: “Many Muslim intellectuals do not dare even to refer to the concept for fear of frightening people or arousing suspicion of all their work by the merest mention of the word.” “Vexatious religious scruples”, such as the reported refusal to handle Bibles in Marks and Spencer or, more seriously, forced marriages. The UK already has an Islamic Shari’a Council, he said. “We should need a much enhanced and quite sophisticated version of such a body, with increased resource and a high degree of community recognition, so that ‘vexatious’ claims could be summarily dealt with. The secular lawyer needs to know where the potential conflict is real, legally and religiously serious, and where it is grounded in either nuisance or ignorance. There can be no blank cheques given to unexamined scruples.” Depriving members of religious minorities from national liberties. Dr Williams raised the matters of the inheritance of widows and “a more neuralgic matter still . . . the historic Islamic prohibition against apostacy”. He argued that the latter was a throwback from the time when apostacy was comparable to treachery in wartime. For accommodation to work today, “there has to be a recognition [by Islamists] that differenc of conviction is not automatically a lethal threat.” Subverting legal universalism. “So much of our thinking in the modern world, dominated by European assumptions about universal rights, rests, surely, on the basis that the law is the law; that everyone stands before the public tribunal on exactly equal terms.” Read the full lecture below
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