Pacific Media Watch

22 July 2011

REGION: Malaysian group criticises 'narrow view' of Sharia law

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Radio New Zealand reporter Georgina Ball interviewing Ratna Osman at last night's seminar. Photo: Del Abcede/PMC
PMW ID
7547

Lincoln Tan

AUCKLAND (New Zealand Herald/Pacific Media Watch): The "conservative, literal and narrow interpretation" of Sharia law by Muslim leaders is the real problem facing Muslims, a New Zealand public forum on human rights was told in Auckland last night.

Ratna Osman, acting executive director of the Malaysian-based group Sisters of Islam, said debate was needed for Islam to be better understood.

"But fear has been instilled ... and we don't talk about things that Muslims are sensitive about," she said.

About 60 people, mainly non-Muslims, attended the "Muslim Women Rights is Human Rights" forum at the AUT University's Pacific M edia Centre.

Osman's group is opposed to the traditional Muslim teaching that men are superior to women, and criticises Sharia (Islamic) law as being "human constructed" and "not divine".

Group founder Zainah Anwar said the law was therefore "fallible, changeable, given a different time and context".

The group also says Islam has no laws making burqa-wearing compulsory.

Race Relations Commissioner Joris de Bres, who has previously said laws banning Muslims from wearing veils amount to discrimination on grounds of religious belief, would not comment on whether those forcing women to wear burqas were in breach of NZ's human rights laws.

Javed Khan, vice-president of the Federation of Islamic Associations of New Zealand, said he did not share many of the views of Sisters of Islam, which he described as a "splinter group".

He said a public debate on matters such as the burqa would just raise further confusion about Islam and further isolate Muslim women who wore the garment.

Khan reckoned only about 100 women, from a Muslim population in New Zealand estimated at between 45,000 and 55,000, wore a niqab or a burqa.

The Sisters in Islam seminar
 

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