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Islamic Criminology

Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world. Irrespective of the
prejudice and propaganda against Islam and Muslims it continues to lead in
expansion.
Fearing the rapid expansion the western media have used the label of
"Islamic Fundamentalists" to Muslims who do something wrong to imply all
kinds of possible negative connotations: terrorists, kidnappers and
hostage takers, where as the media do not use the term "Christian
Fundamentalist” for a Christian who behaves wrongly. A Muslim who is
trying to live his religion is indeed a true believer in God. This person
tries to live all of the rites of his religion in a fundamental way. Thus,
a true believer is a fundamentalist in the practice of his religion. But
he cannot be radical, because the Quran teaches tolerance and moderation
in all things. Allah says:
وَكَذَٲلِكَ جَعَلۡنَـٰكُمۡ أُمَّةً۬ وَسَطً۬ا
لِّتَڪُونُواْ شُہَدَآءَ عَلَى ٱلنَّاسِ وَيَكُونَ ٱلرَّسُولُ عَلَيۡكُمۡ
شَهِيدً۬اۗ
Thus, have We made of you an Ummat justly balanced, that ye might be
witnesses over the nations, and the Messenger a witness over yourselves.
(2:143)
When the popular media generalize the fundamentalist believer to the
radical fundamentalist they do harm to all Muslims and others. The use of
such labels is wrong for any group; Christians, Muslims, or Jews. The
media have used some terms of Islam as a way to increase hatred and
prejudice in the mind of people. They have taken the views of a few
radicals and projected them onto all Muslims. This action has done a great
harm to the Muslim world.
Misinterpretation
The public and many academicians have several preconceived notions about
Islamic Law. One such notion is that Islamic judges are bound by ancient
and outdated rules of fixed punishments for all crimes and they do not
possess much greater freedom in giving punishment for crimes. They often
point to the inflexible nature of Islamic Law.
Importance of Islamic Law
Some of these inaccurate perceptions and treatments in both the
contemporary literature and academic writings can be altered by the
following theories:
- The myth, that Islamic judges are bound by ancient and outdated
rules of fixed punishments for all crimes and they do not possess much
greater freedom in punishment for crimes, is negated by the truth that
Judges under Islamic Law are free to create new options and ideas to
solve new lesser crimes (Ta’azeer). Some contemporary
scholars fail to recognize Islamic Law as an equal to English Common
Law, European Civil Law and Socialist Law.
- To understand Islamic Law, one must first understand the
assumptions of Islam and the basic tenets of the religion. The meaning
of the word Islam is "submission or surrender to Allah's (God's)
will." Therefore, Muslims must first and foremost obey and submit to
Allah's will. Allah has ordered them to protect certain things. In
order to protect those important indispensables (religion, life,
intellect, offspring, dignity and property), Islamic Law has provided
a worldly punishment in addition to that in the hereafter. Islam has,
in fact, adopted two courses for the preservation of these
indispensables: the first is through cultivating religious
consciousness in the human soul and the awakening of human awareness
through moral education; the second is by imposing deterrent
punishment, which is the basis of the Islamic criminal system.
- There is a concept of Human Dignity in the Islamic legal theory.
The concept suggests that human dignity is a changeable legal
attribute i.e. non inherent in the Being. It means a human being has
dignity as long as he obeys the Islamic rules or Allah’s conviction.
According to this understanding, Islamic punishments, including
corporal punishments like death penalty, whipping and stoning, have no
conflict with the conception of human dignity because when a person
commits those offences punishable (like killing and adultery), he
loses his dignity and even may descend into animalism.
Differences between Islamic Law and the
Modern Law
- Unlike the modern Law, the definition of crime and its solution
provided by Islam is valid for all the times gone and to come. This is
the only guarantee for attaining unity, harmony and solidarity. It is
to be remembered that law is one of the systems of culture and the
culture is to be followed for attaining balance in life.
- In Islamic concept the government cannot be off religion. The
government is controlled, ruled and regulated by Islam. The theocracy
controls all public and private matters. Government, law and religion
are one. Most of the western people have great difficulty with that
concept. The U.S. Constitution (Bill of Rights) prohibits the
government from "establishing a religion". The U.S. Supreme Court has
concluded in numerous cases that the U.S. Government can't favor one
religion over another. That concept is implicit for most U.S. legal
scholars and many U.S. academicians believe that any mixture of
"church and state" is inherently evil and filled with many problems.
They reject all notions of a mixture of religion and government.
- Modern law is filled with precedents, rules, and limitations which
inhibit creative justice. But Judges under Islamic Law are free to
create new options and ideas to solve new lesser crimes (Ta’azeer).
Islamic Law
Islamic law is known as Sharia Law, and Sharia means the path to follow
Allah's Law. Sharia Law is holistic or eclectic in its approach to guide
the individual in most daily matters. Sharia Law controls, rules and
regulates all public and private behavior. It has regulations for personal
hygiene, diet, sexual conduct, and elements of child getting. It also
prescribes specific rules for prayers, fasting, giving to the poor, and
many other religious matters.
Sharia Law can also be used in larger situations than guiding an
individual's behavior. It can be used as guide for how an individual acts
in society and how one group interacts with another. The Sharia Law can be
used to settle border disputes between nations or within nations. It can
also be used to settle international disputes, conflicts and wars. This
Law does not exclude any knowledge from other sources and is viewed by the
Muslim world as a vehicle to solve all problems: civil, criminal and
international.
Crimes and its solution in Islam
Crimes under Islamic Law can be broken down into three major categories.
Each will be discussed in greater detail later. The three major crime
categories in Islamic Law are:
- Qisas Crimes (Retaliation).
- Had Crimes (most serious).
- Ta'azeer Crimes (Discretionary).
Qisas
Crimes: Diya andSolutions
A Qisas crime is commendable for retaliation. If you commit a
Qisas crime, the victim has a right to seek retribution and
retaliation. The exact punishment for each Qisas crime is set
forth in the Quran. Qisas crimes include:
1. Premeditated murder.
If a person is killed in this category,
then his family has right to seek Qisas punishment from the
murderer. The punishment can come either in the form of killing the
murderer or in the form of Diya (hundred camels in three
divisions (thirty Hiqqa which are three years old female camel, thirty
ja’d’a which are four years old female camel and forty khalfath which are
pregnant) or cost of the camels)when they forgive death penalty to the
offender. The family can liberate him from the Diya too.
The holy Quran dictates:
وَمَن قُتِلَ مَظۡلُومً۬ا فَقَدۡ جَعَلۡنَا لِوَلِيِّهِۦ
سُلۡطَـٰنً۬ا فَلَا يُسۡرِف فِّى ٱلۡقَتۡلِۖ إِنَّهُ ۥ كَانَ مَنصُورً۬ا
… And whoever is killed wrongfully (intentionally with hostility and
oppression and not by mistake), We have given his heir the authority [to
demand Qisas, - Law of Equality in punishment - or to forgive, or to take
Diya (blood-money)]. But let him not exceed limits in the matter
of taking life (i.e. he should not kill except the killer). Verily, he is
helped (by the Islamic law). [17:33].
Killing of the offender is permitted only
here. The murderer can be killed in the same manner he killed another
person if he deliberately killed him. This is indeed absolute justice as
Allah Says:
وَإِنۡ عَاقَبۡتُمۡ فَعَاقِبُواْ بِمِثۡلِ مَا عُوقِبۡتُم بِهِۦۖ
وَلَٮِٕن صَبَرۡتُمۡ لَهُوَ خَيۡرٌ۬ لِّلصَّـٰبِرِينَ
And if you punish [a criminal, O believers], punish with an equivalent
of that with which you were harmed. But if you are patient — it is better
for those who are patient.[16:126]
2. Non-premeditated murder.
Here the family has right to seek Diya
(hundred camels in three divisions (thirty Hiqqa, thirty ja’d’a and
forty khalfath) or cost of the camels) from the family of murderer. The
family can liberate him from the Diya
3. Murder by error.
Here the family has right to seek Diya
(hundred camels in five divisions (twenty each from binth Makhadh
which is one year old female camel, binth Labun which is two
years old female camel, bani Labun which is two years old male
camel, Hiqqa which is three years old female camel and Ja’d’a
which is four years old female camel) or cost of the camels) from the
family of murderer. The family can liberate him from the Diya
4. Premeditated offenses against human organs like legs, hands, eyes,
ears, etc.
Here the victim has the right to get
retribution for what he had suffered from the offender in similar degree
or to seek Diya if he forgives. He can liberate him from the
both.
The Diya in this category varies by the type of offences. If
casualty occurred in the most useful and beautiful organ or in both of the
paired organs like eyes, Diya of murder could be taken. If
casualty occurred in one of the paired organs, half of the Diya
could be taken. Each finger is worth for ten camels and each tooth is
worth for five.
5. Offenses against human organs like legs, hands, eyes, ears, etc, by
error.
Here the victim has right to seek the
Diya mentioned in pre meditated offences against human organs.
Some reporters in the mass media have criticized the thought of "blood to
blood" punishment as barbaric. They labeled the practice as undemocratic
and inhumane. Here the holy Quran answers:
وَلَكُمۡ فِى ٱلۡقِصَاصِ حَيَوٰةٌ۬ يَـٰٓأُوْلِى ٱلۡأَلۡبَـٰبِ
لَعَلَّڪُمۡ تَتَّقُونَ
And there is life for you in retaliation, O men of understanding, that ye
may ward off (evil). [2:179]
Killing one or two persons / hurting them may be a sufficient reason for
saving millions from an inevitable death caused by murdering others or
from hurting others. Moreover, Allah draws our attention to the fact that
kindness, affection should be in some situations while other situations
need harshness and force and that being kind in some places is a mistake.
The purpose of enforcement of Qisas is to be serious enough with those who
think of jeopardizing others' lives. Allah says the benefit of such Qisas
in the verse.
Qisas crimes are based upon the criminological assumption of
retribution. The concept of retribution was found in the first statutory
"Code of Hammurabi" and in the Law of Moses in the form of "an eye for an
eye." Muslims add to that saying "but it is better to forgive".
Contemporary common law today still is filled with the assumptions of
retribution. The United States federal code contains "mandatory minimum"
sentences for drug dealing, and many states have fixed punishment for
drugs and violence and using weapons. The United States justice system has
adopted a retribution model which sets fixed punishments for each crime.
The idea of retribution is fixed in the U.S. system of justice. Then why
the criticism?
Another concept of Qisas crimes is the area of punishment. Each
victim has the right to ask for retaliation but Imam would carry out that
punishment. Modern Islamic law now requires the government to carry out
the Qisas punishment. Some grieving family member may have
tortured the offender in the process of punishment. That is why the Imam
and the government, who are the independent party, administer the
punishment, because torture and extended pain is contrary to Islamic
teachings and Sharia Law.
Hadd Crimes and solution
Hadd crimes are certain cruel crimes which have established
punishment. These most serious of all crimes are specified to a particular
punishment by an exact reference in the Quran. There is no plea-bargaining
or reducing the punishment for a Hadd crime. Hadd crimes
have no minimum or maximum punishments.
When the crimes are proved, no judge can change or reduce the punishment
for these serious crimes. A judge can only impose the Hadd
punishment when a person confesses the crime, or takes an oath (in some
cases), or there are enough witnesses to the crime. The usual number of
witnesses is two, but in the case of adultery four witnesses are required.
The media often leaves the public with the impression that all are
punished with poor evidence or limited proof.
But one who has been forced to commit crime is exempt, if it is proved,
from every punishment, for the Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihi wa Sallam) said:
"Allah forgives for my Ummah sins committed by mistakes, forgetfulness or
compulsion" [ Ibn Majah ].
Hadd crimes are:
If a Muslim apostates, he will be called to
repent, then if he repents, [and therefore re-embraces Islam] this is
acceptable from him, otherwise he should be killed. Any person who enters
Islam and then gives it up, commits a major sin for which he deserves to
be beheaded because he left, by this act, the Muslim community, and
betrayed himself. This is treason to the Muslim community. So, such a
person who apostates and defects from the community becomes, like a
cancerous organ that has to be removed to avoid that the expansion of the
disease reaches other organs. But, this mutilation should only be taken
place if there is no hope of treating it. The apostate is given a last
opportunity to repent and return back to Islam before being executed. If
he perseveres and refuses to return to what he has committed himself to,
i.e. Islam, he is then executed. This is a retributive act and the
apostate is then the one who harmed himself by sticking to his apostasy.
the Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihi wa Sallam) said:
"The blood of a Muslim who confesses that none has the right to be
worshipped but Allah and that I am His Apostle, cannot be shed except in
three cases: In Qisas for murder, a married person who commits illegal
sexual intercourse and the one who reverts from Islam (apostate) and
leaves the Muslims." (Bukhari, Muslim and others).
2. Adultery
The Adultery, for which Hadd is
prescribed, is penetration of a glens penis into a forbidden vagina. The
other acts such as kissing, hugging, and caressing are no doubt among the
minor acts of Adultery, but there is no Hadd imposed on them.
Adulterers should be stoned to death, if they are married and if they are
not, whipping hundred times and exile for one year must be executed as
Allah says:
ٱلزَّانِيَةُ وَٱلزَّانِى فَٱجۡلِدُواْ كُلَّ وَٲحِدٍ۬ مِّنۡہُمَا
مِاْئَةَ جَلۡدَةٍ۬ۖ وَلَا تَأۡخُذۡكُم بِہِمَا رَأۡفَةٌ۬ فِى دِينِ ٱللَّهِ
إِن كُنتُمۡ تُؤۡمِنُونَ بِٱللَّهِ وَٱلۡيَوۡمِ ٱلۡأَخِرِ
{The fornicatress and the fornicator, flog each of them with a
hundred stripes and let not pity for them detain you in the matter of
obedience to Allah, if you believe in Allah and the last day, }[ 24:2].
the Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihi wa Sallam) said: "Take from me the
religious ruling, take from me the religious ruling, Allah has set a
punishment for them, the virgin person is to be flogged one hundred times,
and should be exiled for one year, and non-virgin person has to be stoned
to death." [Muslim]
It should be noted that the punishment of
stoning to death is adequate to his abominable act. Since his entire body
enjoyed what is forbidden for him –while he was able to do this in a
legitimate way (i.e. by marriage) –and thus he deserved to be stoned to
death so that his entire body would feel the pain in return for the
illegal enjoyment which he satisfied himself with. It should be mentioned
that this is more merciful for societies than allowing illegal
relationships and the fatal diseases which they cause, like AIDS and other
sexually transmitted diseases.
Carrying out this punishment in public acts as deterrence for other
criminals and a warning for them against committing an act that
necessitates such a punishment so that peace and tranquility would
prevail, and people would be safe about their lives, their dignity and
their wealth. Stoning one or two persons may be a sufficient reason for
saving millions from an inevitable death and diseases that require many
resources and money. For this benefit Allah orders:
وَلۡيَشۡہَدۡ عَذَابَہُمَا طَآٮِٕفَةٌ۬ مِّنَ ٱلۡمُؤۡمِنِينَ
and let a party of believers witness their chastisement (24:2)
In addition to this, an adulterer should not be stoned to death if the
conditions for stoning are not met.
For fornication and adultery to be proven, four witnesses have to have
witnessed the act and their testimony would not be accepted unless each
one testified that he had seen the male sexual organ inside the vagina of
the woman, because it could be that he shared the bed with her without
having committed any sex act with her. There is no doubt that it is very
difficult to prove fornication and adultery in this way, but it is not
impossible. The purpose of this condition is, as we have stated, to
protect the honour and dignity of the human beings.
3. Defamation (false accusation of adultery or fornication)
If the defamed is very religious, the
offenders must be whipped eighty times and in the case of others forty
times. The holy Quran says:
وَٱلَّذِينَ يَرۡمُونَ ٱلۡمُحۡصَنَـٰتِ ثُمَّ لَمۡ يَأۡتُواْ
بِأَرۡبَعَةِ شُہَدَآءَ فَٱجۡلِدُوهُمۡ ثَمَـٰنِينَ جَلۡدَةً۬ وَلَا
تَقۡبَلُواْ لَهُمۡ شَہَـٰدَةً أَبَدً۬اۚ وَأُوْلَـٰٓٮِٕكَ هُمُ
ٱلۡفَـٰسِقُونَ
And those who accuse honourable women but bring not four witnesses,
scourge them (with) eighty stripes and never (afterward) accept their
testimony - They indeed are evil-doers. (24:4)
4. Alcohol-drinking:
Drunkards must be beaten up
forty times as the Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihi wa Sallam) said:
عن
معاوية رضي الله عنه قال قال رسول الله صلى الله عليه و سلم من شرب
الخمرفاجلدوه
(Tirmidhiy)
5. Theft
Thief must be punished by amputation of
wrist or feet, depending on the number of times it is committed and by the
Ta’azeer after the amputation as the Quran says:
وَٱلسَّارِقُ وَٱلسَّارِقَةُ فَٱقۡطَعُوٓاْ
أَيۡدِيَهُمَا جَزَآءَۢ بِمَا كَسَبَا نَكَـٰلاً۬ مِّنَ ٱللَّهِۗ وَٱللَّهُ
عَزِيزٌ حَكِيمٌ۬
As to the thief, Male or female, cut off his or her hands: a punishment by
way of example, from Allah, for their crime: and Allah is Exalted in
power. [5:38].
Islamic law has a very high level of proof for the most serious crimes and
punishments. When there is doubt about the guilt of a Hadd crime,
the judge must treat the crime as a Ta'azeer crime. If there is
no confession to a crime or not enough witnesses to the crime, Islamic law
requires the Hadd crime to be punished as a Ta'azeer
crime.
Ta'azeer Crimes and solution
Ta'azeer crimes are not commendable for Kaffarath and
Hadd punishment. Some of the more common Ta'azeer crimes
are: bribery, selling tainted or defective products, treason, usury, and
selling obscene things, etc. Some common law writers use the analogy of
misdemeanors, which is the lesser of the two categories (felony and
misdemeanor) of common law crimes. Ta'azeer crimes can and do
have comparable "minor felony equivalents". The Islamic judges are free to
punish the offender in almost any fashion. Islamic law has much greater
flexibility than the Western media portrays. Each judge is free to punish
based upon local norms, customs, and informal rules. Each judge is free to
fix the punishment that will deter others from crime and will help to
rehabilitate an offender. Mohammed Salam Madkoar, who was the head of
Islamic Law at the University of Cairo, makes the following observation
(Ministry of the Interior, 1976,p.104):
Ta'azeer punishments vary according to the circumstances. They
change from time to time and from place to place. They vary according to
the gravity of the crime and the extent of the criminal disposition of the
criminal himself.
Ta'azeer crimes can be punished whether they harm the social
interest or not. The assumption of the punishment is that a greater evil
will be prevented in the future if you punish this offender now.
Historically Ta'azeer crimes were not written down or codified.
This gave each ruler great flexibility in what punishments the judge was
able to dispense. The judge under Islamic Law is not bound by precedents,
rules, or prior decisions as in common law. Judges are totally free to
choose from any number of punishments that, they think, will help in
defending an individual from offences. The only guiding principle for
judges under Sharia Law is that they must answer to Allah and to the
community. Some of the more common punishment for Ta'azeer crimes
are flogging, fines, public or private censure, family and clan pressure,
seizure of property, confinement in the home or place of detention, and so
on.
In some Islamic nations, Ta'azeer crimes are set by legislative
parliament. Each nation is free to establish its own criminal code and
there is a great disparity in punishment of some of these crimes.
Modern Islamic Society has changed greatly from the time of the Prophet.
For example, the consumption of alcohol in Egypt is punished much
differently than in Iran or Saudi Arabia because they have far different
civil laws. Egypt has a parliamentary process which has a formal penal
code written and based upon the principles of Islamic Law, but Saudi
Arabia allows the judge to set the Ta'azeer crimes and
punishments. Modern Islamic Law recognizes many differences between these
two nations.
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