https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/69030/html
About the
National Secular Society
1.
This submission is made by the National Secular Society (NSS). The NSS
is a not-for-profit organisation founded in 1866, funded by its members and by
donations. It campaigns for a diverse society where all are free to practise
their faith, change it, or to have no faith at all. The NSS advocates
separation of religion and state and promotes secularism as the best means of
creating a society in which people of all religions or none can live together
fairly and cohesively.
Summary
The
NSS seeks to promote and protect personal and religious freedoms; however, the
increasing use of sharia as a system for alternative dispute resolution in the
UK is an issue of concern to us. Sharia is a system which leaves children
vulnerable and discriminates openly against women, undermining their legal and
political equality. Sharia Councils have been shown to have acted in ways
contrary to the law and leaving women vulnerable to domestic abuse. As such, we
argue that the state needs to better tackle the numerous problems and dangers
the use of sharia councils brings with it.
Sharia in
the UK
3.
The exact number of sharia councils operating in the UK is disputed.
Research from the University of Reading in 2012 identified 30 councils
operating in England[1] but the study only considered “major” councils and
acknowledged that “small” and “local” councils “had been missed”. It is our
view that the smaller councils which exert a powerful local influence may be
the most harmful to women. Civitas, in 2009, said there were “at least” 85
sharia councils in the UK.[2] It is our view that the number of sharia councils
is likely to be higher than this, and that the exact figure may be practically
impossible to determine. Two or three ‘judges’ convened in somebody’s private
property dispensing ‘legal’ advice may describe themselves as a sharia council,
and exert profound influence on their community. Yet the wider public and the
state may have absolutely no knowledge of such an ‘institution’. The problems
that emerge in identifying an exact number of sharia councils also reappear
when possible remedies are considered below.
4. Sharia is a system that has been
described by Judges in the House of Lords as “arbitrary and
discriminatory"[3] and it is undeniable that the primary sources from
which sharia councils derive their rulings are innately discriminatory. We
accept that some sharia councils and Muslim Arbitration Tribunals may operate
in a way which is de facto non-discriminatory, but the body of jurisprudence
sharia relies on makes assumptions which are, from the outset, discriminatory
to women and it proceeds from that basis. Treating the testimony of a woman as
less than that of a man or discriminating against women in inheritance are
examples of this.
5. Discrimination against women, and
minorities within Muslim communities, is our primary concern – though not our
only one.
6. It is our view that the use and
flourishing of sharia ‘courts’, whatever the exact number, poses a serious
threat to common citizenship and the long-term integrity of secular law.
7. Sharia councils, often described as
‘courts’, have no formal legal authority. But as Baroness Cox has said, “the
power of Sharia councils lies in how they are perceived by their communities,
allowing the creation of de facto legal structures”.[4] Sharia councils must
never be permitted to present themselves as courts with any legal standing
whatsoever. In isolated and even ghettoised Muslim communities, where English
is not commonly spoken (especially by women)[5] the formal legal position is
practically irrelevant. De factor authority resides in these ‘courts’ as soon
as authority is believed to lie in them.
8. Though that is the correct legal
position, there are ways in which sharia might enter the UK legal system
through the backdoor. While some sharia councils are little more than informal
dispute resolution forums, sometimes in informal settings, others describe
themselves as Muslim Arbitration Tribunals and claim to operate under the
Arbitration Act. This opens the door to arbitration decisions being enforced by
British courts, though we have not seen evidence of this occurring yet.
9. The cultural supremacy of sharia law over
UK law is most strongly felt in marriage and divorce. It is here that Muslim
women are most acutely disadvantaged by sharia councils. A vast number of
Muslim weddings in England and Wales take place with the religious Nikah
ceremony and without a legally recognised marriage.
10. Civil divorces, if there even is a civil
marriage, may not to be recognised by fellow Muslims, so there is huge pressure
to obtain a religious divorce, which can be hard or impossible, especially for
women. This gives sharia councils an immense power over women applying for a
divorce.
11. There are documented cases of women being
refused divorces by sharia councils even when men have been violent,[6] and
custody of the children being determined on arbitrary religious criteria rather
than the child’s best interests.
12. In many instances women are actually sent
back to controlling, violent and abusive husbands by sharia councils.
Undercover filming has uncovered countless examples of this type of result. BBC
Panorama for instance shot footage of an Islamic ‘scholar’ ordering children to
be removed from their mother and placed in the custody of the “reportedly
violent father”.[7]
13. On the other hand, if a divorce is not sought
by the woman, but imposed on her against her will by her husband, who may have
other wives, a Muslim wife can be left destitute or even homeless. She may be
under the impression that she has entered a legal marriage. In fact, she has no
legal protection if the marriage is unrecognised.
14. In case studies collected by the Aurat
Foundation,[8] a group which supports Muslim women, many women spoken of
serious harms caused by a sudden ‘divorce’ after the wrong presumption on their
part that their marriage had some legal standing.
15. One 18-year-old said: “I’m not too sure where
I stand and what my legal rights are. I am scared if I ask questions what will
happen. So I guess it’s best to stay quiet.”
16. Another woman, Asifa, said: “When I was going
through a divorce, I went to a lawyer who told me I had no legal rights as I’m
seen as a girlfriend and not a wife. I just sat there in shock.”
17. Another, Chandi, aged 43, said: “I wasn’t
allowed to have anything when I got divorced. He kept everything, yet I paid
for everything… When I found out I was not able to get anything for me and the
kids, I was suicidal.”
18. This is the product of the presentation of
sharia councils as ‘courts’ with legal standing, reinforced by communal
pressure on women, and vast cultural barriers which may include a lack of
English language, ignorance about UK law and the presumption that a Nikah is a
real marriage and that sharia courts or sharia law have some statutory footing.
19. As long as sharia councils exist and
unrecognised religious marriages are so common, Muslim women will continue to
find themselves in this extremely precarious situation without legal
protection.
20. This brings us towards remedies for the
obvious and demonstrated harms caused by the existence of sharia councils in
the UK.
Remedies
21. In
order to address some of the issues the use of sharia as an arbitration and
mediation mechanism in the UK has raised, Baroness Caroline Cox introduced into
Parliament an Arbitration and Mediation Services (Equality) Bill[9]. Whilst not
mentioning sharia specifically (and applying to all forms of arbitration), her
bill sought to deal with concerns over the lack of equality for women, safety
for witnesses, questions over the legitimacy of arbitration outcomes and the
remit claimed by sharia Councils. It also sought to clarify that sex
discrimination law applies to arbitration tribunal proceedings, in order that
tribunals which operate legitimately under the Arbitration Act 1996 could not
use discriminatory sharia rules (for example, a woman’s testimony being worth
half that of a man’s)[10].
22. the Government has argued that there is no
need for the bill because the points the bill sought to legislate upon were
already covered by existing law. Whilst it is true that some of the mechanisms
the bill sought to introduce are potentially covered by UK law, it is clear
that these laws are not being enacted sufficiently.
23. Another possibility that merits further
consideration is adopting legislation that would make the failure to grant a
divorce unlawful marital captivity. Dutch laws now allow women whose husbands
will not grant a religious divorce to pursue civil or criminal proceedings[11].
24. The adverse effect on, especially women’s,
rights of religious tribunals has led some provinces in Canada to proscribe
them. This approach should not be ruled out. A commitment to religious liberty
must be weighed against the need to protect those most vulnerable from the
imposition of patriarchal religious law.
25. As we have seen from the difficulty in simply
establishing the number of these councils that exist, a ban would presumably
create a duty on local authorities to identify premises operating as sharia
councils so that they could be closed. From our experience of unregistered,
illegal religious schools, we have little confidence that local authorities
would work proactively to identify sharia courts were a ban to be implemented,
given the immense sensitivity of such a task.[12] Local authorities have consistently
failed to tackle much worse abuse in Muslim communities through misplaced
deeply counter-productive and invidious political correctness.[13]
26. In our estimation this option could shut down
the least harmful councils (those inclined to acknowledge and obey the law) and
leave untouched the ones that have no care for secular, UK law.
27. These practical arguments are not in
themselves an argument against a ban, and we would urge the Government and
future governments to keep this option open and under review, despite the
practical difficulties, but a ban is likely to be a token gesture, rather than
a successful measure that would bring about an end to the proliferation of
sharia courts. It may, one day, be a gesture that is required, but it should
not be thought of as an immediate solution to the significant social problems
caused by sharia courts.
28. A ban would (in theory) tackle the supply of
sharia courts. However, in our view the problem is not just one of supply, but
fundamentally of demand. There is a clear appetite for sharia councils. While
it is our view that these institutions discriminate against women and/or base
their rulings on texts which are innately discriminatory, it is undeniable that
many Muslim women and men wish to use sharia councils for purposes of
arbitration.
29. One way to tackle this demand is through the
education system. Muslim women and girls must be educated in full knowledge of
their legal and civil rights. Education about citizenship, civil rights and the
state legal system should be at the heart of our approach to challenging the
demand for sharia courts.
30. But the active promotion of the principle of
one law for all and common citizenship in the state education system can only
go so far. The significant numbers of Muslim and Jewish children (in
particular) who are disappearing from the education system leaves them in
religious schools, potentially unregistered and illegal, without access to this
curriculum. This speaks to the far more profound problems in our society and in
community cohesion, described by Professor Ted Cantle as the living of
“parallel lives”.[14]
31. Though it is not currently our view that a
ban would be effective, the growing religious orthodoxy of Islam across the
world and extremely alarming, consistent polling on the attitudes of British
Muslims, may mean that a blunter instrument, such as a ban, is required in
future.
32. It has been suggested that to mitigate the
harms of sharia councils that they are brought into the legal system or
recognised in some way, provided that they adhere to equality standards. This
would be disastrous. It would further blur the line between the state legal
system and informal arbitration. This would have terrible effects for Muslim
women and it would afford councils even more credibility within Muslim
communities. The legitimisation of sharia councils in this way would have
little practical effect on the rulings of the ‘least bad’ councils but would,
we believe, have a trickle-down effect conferring legitimacy on other sharia
councils by legitimising sharia law itself. The Government cannot have a role
overseeing sharia councils in this way.
33. As we have said, the mere existence of sharia
councils will create a pressure to use them. Any state legitimacy conferred on
sharia councils will enhance this effect, while strengthening the most
regressive voices within Muslim communities and silencing women and more
secular opinions by making objections to sharia arbitration harder to sustain –
because the state would have legitimised them.
34. That is not the only objection to some kind
of state oversight. Such a move to ‘localise’ the legal system to individual
religious groups "strikes at the heart of meaningful citizenship," in
the words of Dr Ronan McCrea, a Senior Lecturer in Law at UCL.
35. Dr McCrea has written in Public Law[15] that
“encouraging disengagement” from the legal system could lead to a “balkanised
society”. As long as sharia councils exist, he writes, “members of religious
minorities will have to endure "emotional and social costs which are not
imposed on their fellow citizens" if they try to access secular courts.”
36. There are no simple solutions to the problems
posed by sharia courts. Education must be used to empower Muslim citizens and
tackle demand, and councils that pose a physical danger to women and children
must be closed immediately – sharia councils are not permitted currently to
rule on child custody. Local authorities should therefore be exhorted by the
Government and by parliament to become far more curious about what goes on at
sharia councils and to identify councils which are, through custody ‘orders’,
putting women and children at risk.
Summary
of recommendations
37. The
legal system must not be undermined. Action must be taken to ensure that none
of the councils currently in operation misrepresent themselves as sources of
legal authority.
38. Work should be undertaken by local
authorities to identify sharia councils, and official figures should be made
available to measure the extent of sharia councils’ influence in the UK.
39. There needs to be a continuing review by the
Government of the extent to which religious ‘law’, including religious marriage
without civil marriage, is undermining human rights and/or becoming de facto
law. The Government must be proactive in proposing solutions, e.g. making prior
civil marriage a necessary precondition of holding Nikah ceremonies and
exploring legal measures to prevent the unreasonable withholding of religious
divorce.
40. We believe that an information campaign is
needed to reach out to women and inform them of their rights in law. All
schools, both in the state and independent sector, should be under a duty to
promote understanding of citizenship and legal rights under UK law so that
people – particularly Muslim women and girls – are aware of and able to access
their legal rights and do not regard religious ‘courts’ as sources of genuine
legal authority. We also argue that there needs to be a strengthening of the
obligations of public bodies to ensure that women are made aware of their legal
rights and to clarify that discrimination law applies to arbitration.
41. it is essential for the Government to clarify
and determine that equality legislation applies comprehensively to the process
of arbitration and mediation so that, for example, tribunals operating under
the Arbitration Act 1996 could not use discriminatory sharia rules such as a
woman’s testimony being worth half that of a man.
42. We do not rule out the need future ban, and
would certainly not campaign against one now. But a ban must not be seen as a
‘silver bullet’, it is not.
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