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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck who wrote (9902)9/9/2005 12:14:06 PM
From: kirby49  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 32591
 
Critics say otherwise, and today, demonstrations against the act are planned in 12 cities in Canada and Europe including Amsterdam, London, Paris and Dusseldorf, in what activists say is part of a global battle between secular societies and "political Islam."

Darren, I went down to the provincial parliament yesterday to the demonstration to listen to the speakers. If you click on the link, you'll see a picture of a young lady fully covered in her burqa, spouting the goodness of shariah. She was there with some cleric, but wouldn't answer my question whether she was wife number 2, 3 or 4. LOL The second link should give you a picture of the cleric.

Protesters liken McGuinty to Taliban leaders, urge Ontario to ignore Shariah

Keith Leslie
Canadian Press

Friday, September 09, 2005

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A woman argues with Joanne Siska during a protest against Sharia law. (CP PHOTO/Adrian Wyld)

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TORONTO (CP) - Angry demonstrators likened the premier of Ontario to Afghanistan's extremist Taliban leaders Thursday as they urged Dalton McGuinty to dismiss the idea of allowing the use of Shariah law to settle family disputes.

About 300 people gathered outside the Ontario legislature for a protest billed as a global campaign to discourage the province from becoming the first Western jurisdiction to permit the use of religious rules critics consider an affront to human rights.

Speaker after speaker told the crowd McGuinty was naive to suggest that women's rights would not be trampled if Ontario allowed the controversial Shariah principles to be used to settle Muslim divorces, custody fights and inheritance disputes.

"These words are not coming from Ayatollahs (or) from Taliban leaders," Iranian refugee Mahmoud Ahmandi told the crowd.

"It's coming from the leader of Ontario's government; shame on you," he said as the protesters chanted "shame, shame."

That sentiment was echoed by Homa Arjomand, who helped to co-ordinate a series of protests Thursday across Canada and Europe comprised of members of 100 different women's and human rights groups.

"Either he (McGuinty) is naive, or he thinks people are stupid," Arjomand said. "Mr. McGuinty, don't tell me that all these 100 organizations are all a bunch of man-hating criminals who do nothing but make a fuss over an imaginary threat."

Amanda Dale of the YWCA warned McGuinty there would be a political price to pay if his government agrees to include Shariah law in the province's Arbitration Act, as recommended in a report last year by former attorney general Marion Boyd.

"I have one very important message for the premier of Ontario: we know the women's vote got you in," Dale said. "It can also get you out."

Ontario's flirtations with Shariah had critics across Canada and around the world standing up in protest.

In Montreal, about 100 people turned out in the rain to protest against the use of Shariah law in Ontario. Quebec has passed a law against the use of Muslim tribunals in the province.

Elahe Chokrai-Machouf, head of the Association of Iranian Women in Montreal, said Shariah law hurts the rights of women.

"We came here with the hope of living in a free and democratic and secular country," Chokrai-Machouf said.

Similar rallies were scheduled for Ottawa and Victoria, and Arjomand said smaller protests were held earlier Thursday in London, Amsterdam, Paris and Dusseldorf, Germany, where about 25 protesters picketed outside the Canadian consulate.

Since December, the Liberal government has been sitting on Boyd's report, which recommends that the province allow and regulate Shariah religious arbitrations in much the same way it does existing Catholic and Jewish tribunals.

Earlier this week, McGuinty said Attorney General Michael Bryant was still reviewing the report on Shariah and would make his recommendations at some point in the future.

Bryant's office issued a statement promising "there will be no binding family arbitration in Ontario that uses a set of rules or laws that discriminate against women."

Not everyone at the protest in Toronto was there to oppose Shariah, however.

Mubin Shaikh of the Canadian Muslim organization Nasjid-el-no was verbally attacked by some women at the rally as he tried to dispel what he called the many myths being propagated about Shariah, which he supports.

"It is partly racism, because you can see from the comments that people were making, like, 'Go back to where you come from,"' said Shaikh. "Well, I'm from here."

Shaikh said the behaviour of Islamic extremists with rigid interpretations of Shariah should not be considered mainstream views in the Muslim community.

Arjomand, meanwhile, said several women who were treated unfairly under Shariah law were afraid to appear at Thursday's rallies because of possible recriminations, which she warned could halt future attempts to stop Shariah from being adopted in Ontario.

"If anything happened to these women, the campaign would be ended," she said. "The fear among these communities would be so high, that no one would come out and talk."

"This is a clear message to Mr. McGuinty that we are organizing ourselves internationally," said Arjomand. "We women, and all human rights organizations, realize this is an attack and it's happening globally, and we have to fight it globally."

© The Canadian Press 2005

canada.com

canada.com