Blunderov
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"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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RE: virus: Brer Dubya and the tar-baby?
« on: 2004-02-23 02:35:42 » |
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[Blunderov] Gosh! What a surprise. Best Regards
<q> http://atheism.about.com/b/a/064371.htm?terms=n606b
Islam to Become Law of Iraq? The movement towards theocracy in Iraq, including the efforts to deprive women of basic civil liberties, has been reported on here before - and it is getting worse. Mohsen Abdel-Hamid, the current president of Iraq's U.S.-picked Governing Council and a member of a drafting committee framing the basic transitional law (which acts as an interim constitution), has demanded that Islam become the principal basis for Iraq's laws. The San Diego Union-Tribune reports:
If approved, the proposal could have broad effects on secular Iraq, taking away rights of women in divorce and inheritance cases, shuttering liquor stores and banning gambling, legal advisers here say. Elements also run counter to President Bush's goal of turning Iraq into a beacon for democracy in the Middle East. ... ''If someone proposes a law of inheritance that conflicts with sharia, or Islam, then it's invalid,'' [Salem Chalabi, a legal adviser to the Governing Council and a member of the 10-member drafting committee] said. ''The registration of liquor stores may become illegal.'' Abdel-Hamid is a Sunni Muslim scholar who heads the Iraqi Islamic Party, which espouses a conservative view of Islam. ... Perhaps the largest effect would be to moot much of Iraq's 1959 Law of Personal Status, which grants uniform rights to husband and wife to divorce and inheritance, and governs related issues like child support, Chalabi said. Representatives of Iraq's Kurdish and Christian parties, and those with liberal Western views have voiced opposition to the Islamization of Iraq's legal code, and the issue remains under discussion. ... ''If this happens 50 percent of Iraqi society will need to be liberated,'' said Younadem Kana, a Christian member of the Governing Council. ''We need to fight for the rights of all Iraqis women and minorities as well.'' This is very problematic - if the United States "liberated" Iraq, only to have more than half the population reduced to second-class status, then how will the American government be able to continue justifying the war? Originally the justification was the "immanent threat" of Weapons of Mass Destruction, but it appears as though neither the threat nor the weapons ever existed.
Recently the defense has been that the Iraqi people needed to be liberated from an oppressive regime - and while that may not necessarily have justified the war, at least it is a valid issue to point out. However, it can't work as even a possible defense of the war if "liberation" doesn't really happen and a theocracy is created. </q>
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