on 24-10-2015 01:18 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayaItdH5huc
The bleeding hearts think just let them in as many as want to come.When you show them what is happening they refuse to listen.
on 24-10-2015 04:38 PM
@cmcoins2000 wrote:
@*julia*2010 wrote:i gather you didn't do your research
then ?
Only 6 years of it possum.
oh good darls. i didnt know that.
how many sharia councils are there
in the uk?
on 24-10-2015 04:43 PM
Could be history repeating its self, I mean a lot of armed Soldiers and crims came to Australia with a strange religion and forced their religion and way of life on the locals 🙂
on 24-10-2015 04:44 PM
Begin with the word - ARBITRATION - then go from there.
These are simply alternatives to a legal court - a stepping stone to avoid in some instances having to ' go to court '
are you saying the decisions are not
legally binding?
on 24-10-2015 04:47 PM
@lionrose.7 wrote:Could be history repeating its self, I mean a lot of armed Soldiers and crims came to Australia with a strange religion and forced their religion and way of life on the locals 🙂
why are you happy?
we wouldn't want that
24-10-2015 04:47 PM - edited 24-10-2015 04:47 PM
THE MUSLIM LAW SHARIA COUNCIL UK.
on 24-10-2015 04:49 PM
@the_great_she_elephant wrote:THE MUSLIM LAW SHARIA COUNCIL UK.
- Through its voluntary services, The Council provides assistance, guidance and resolution to married Muslim men and women seeking an Islamic divorce (talaaq).
- The Council does not provide a parallel judiciary service and only aims to offer a mechanism for obtaining an Islamic divorce, a religious obligation in Islam, which is not currently obtainable through the English courts and legal system.
- The Council does not adjudicate on any other matters or disputes and advises its clients to refer to the English courts in all such other cases.
- The Council maintains a policy of avoiding conflict between the law of the land and Islamic law in its deliberation.
http://www.shariahcouncil.org/?page_id=365
Your father was a mason wasnt he?
on 24-10-2015 04:55 PM
Fears over non-Muslim's use of Islamic law to resolve disputes
Campaigners have voiced concerns over a growing number of non-Muslims using Islamic law to resolve legal disputes in Britain despite controversy over the role of sharia law.
A spokesman for the Muslim Arbitration Tribunal (MAT) said that there had been a 15% rise in the number of non-Muslims using sharia arbitrations in commercial cases this year. Last year, more than 20 non-Muslims chose to arbitrate cases at the network of tribunals, which operate in London, Birmingham, Bradford, Manchester, Nuneaton and Luton. "We are offering a cheap and effective service for Muslim and non-Muslims," said MAT spokesperson Fareed Chedie.
"We hope that by incorporating sharia family jurisprudence against a background of domestic Scottish legislation, we can provide our clients with as much relevant information as possible," said Niall Mickel, a solicitor advocate and managing partner at Hamilton Burns.
But some groups have criticised the move by the Scottish firm, arguing that the recognition of sharia law decisions in Britain is regressive and harmful to women.
"We have a petition signed by more than 22,000 people saying that all religious tribunals should be prevented from operating within or outside the legal system," said Maryam Namazie, a spokeswoman for the One Law for All Campaign, which campaigns against sharia law in Britain. " I have spoken to women who are losing custody of their children in the sharia councils – under sharia law custody of a child goes to the husband after a certain age, irrespective of the welfare of the child.
http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/mar/14/non-muslims-sharia-law-uk