Canada: McGuinty Rejects
Ontario's Use of Shariah Law and all Religious Arbitrations
12/09/2005:
"…no religious arbitration in Ontario… one law for all Ontarians,"
says Premier McGuinty.
TORONTO – "I got a call about 4 pm Sunday
afternoon while I was having dinner with my family, I thought the caller was
joking, but it was true … no-faith based arbitration, I am so happy."
said Ms. Homa Arjomand, Coordinator of the International Campaign Against Sharia
Court in Canada.
On Sunday Premier McGuinty was interviewed by the national news agency and made
the following statements:
"I've come to the conclusion that the debate has gone on long enough,"
he said.
"There will be no Shariah law in Ontario. There will be no religious
arbitration in Ontario. There will be one law for all Ontarians."
McGuinty said religious arbitrations "threaten our common ground," and
promised his Liberal government would introduce legislation "as soon as
possible" to outlaw them in Ontario.
Community education is needed now
"I want to thank Premier McGuinty for listening to the people and for
having the courage to make this historic decision … this decision will improve
the standard of human rights for everyone in Ontario.", said Ms.Arjomand .
"Our concern now is how to prevent religious arbitration from continuing
underground and how to assure the laws of Ontario are followed and enforced. It
seems we'll need to educate the communities, especially the people who are most
vulnerable to private religious courts… I look forward to assisting in this
effort.", added Ms.Arjomand.
Thank you to the activists
"Most of all, I want to thank all the people who worked on the
campaign. This victory was the result of the hard work of thousands of
activists, across Ontario, Canada and Europe who volunteered their time and
skills to help bring an end to Sharia courts in Canada," said Ms. Arjomand,
"…to each and everyone of them I want to say thank you, we did this
together."
Sharia is a global struggle
"Together we have defeated the forces of 'Political Islam' in Ontario,
but this is just the first step.", added Ms. Arjomand. "We must not
stop here, we need to continue the fight and assist people in other countries
who live under the burdens of Sharia and Political Islam…countries such as
England, India, Iran, Iraq, Netherlands and Nigeria… the people there are
counting on us."
About Homa Arjomand and the Campaign
Homa Arjomand is the Coordinator of the International Campaign Against
Sharia Court in Canada. She started her campaign in Toronto in October 2003 with
a handful of supporters, and today it has grown to a coalition of 87
organizations from 14 countries with over a thousand activists. Homa is a
Toronto based transitional counselor and was a human rights activist in Iran
until she was forced to flee in 1989.
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BACKGROUND
Update on: Canada: Support Canadian women's struggle against Shari'a Courts
http://wluml.org/english/actionsupdates.shtml?cmd[136]=i-136-e96776a087ad73c9fc7f2d0a77813aec
and
McGuinty rejects Ontario's use of Shariah law and all religious arbitrations
Keith Leslie
Canadian Press
Sunday, September 11, 2005
TORONTO (CP) - Ontario will not become the first Western jurisdiction to allow
the use of a set of centuries' old religious rules called Shariah law to settle
Muslim family disputes, and will ban all religious arbitrations in the province,
Premier Dalton McGuinty told The Canadian Press on Sunday.
In a telephone interview with the national news agency, McGuinty announced his
government would move quickly to outlaw existing religious tribunals used for
years by Christians and Jews under Ontario's Arbitration Act.
"I've come to the conclusion that the debate has gone on long enough,"
he said.
"There will be no Shariah law in Ontario. There will be no religious
arbitration in Ontario. There will be one law for all Ontarians."
McGuinty said religious arbitrations "threaten our common ground," and
promised his Liberal government would introduce legislation "as soon as
possible" to outlaw them in Ontario.
"Ontarians will always have the right to seek advice from anyone in matters
of family law, including religious advice," he said. "But no longer
will religious arbitration be deciding matters of family law."
Last December, a report from former NDP attorney general Marion Boyd recommended
the province allow and regulate Shariah arbitrations much the same way it does
Christian and Jewish tribunals, setting off a firestorm of protests.
Homa Arjomand, the women's rights activist who organized a series of protests
across Canada and Europe last Thursday to convince McGuinty to abandon Shariah,
was elated when she heard the news late Sunday.
"I think our voice got heard loud and clear, and I thank the government for
coming out with no faith-based arbitrations," said Arjomand. "Oh, I am
so happy. That was the best news I have ever heard for the past five
years."
A representative from Ontario's Jewish community expressed disappointment and
shock over McGuinty's decision.
"We're stunned," said Joel Richler, Ontario region chairman of the
Canadian Jewish Congress.
"At the very least, we would have thought the government would have
consulted with us before taking away what we've had for so many years."
Richler said the current system - in place since 1992 - has worked well and saw
no reason for it to be changed for either his or other communities.
"If there have been any problems flowing from any rabbinical court
decisions, I'm not aware of them," he said.
Despite calling for an end to all religious arbitrations, Ontario's New
Democrats were not happy with the way McGuinty handled the Shariah debate.
"By merely sitting on the issue, and by hiding his head in the sand,
McGuinty allowed the debate to in fact fester and grow pretty ugly," said
NDP justice critic Peter Kormos. "That was not helpful to anything in this
multicultural community of ours."
Opposition leader John Tory agreed with the NDP's position that McGuinty
mishandled the Shariah debate.
"One of the tests of leadership in a diverse society is that you not allow
issues like this - which are complex - to boil over into angry, polarized
debates," said Tory.
"By letting it go on, and suddenly ending it mysteriously on a Sunday
afternoon, is not probably the best kind of leadership that one could
show."
Currently, Ontario's Arbitration Act allows civil disputes ranging from custody
and support to divorce and inheritance to be resolved through an independent
arbitrator, if both parties agree.
Catholics, Mennonites, Jews, aboriginals and Jehovah's Witnesses, among others,
have - until now - used the act to settle family law questions without resorting
to the courts.
But those who opposed permitting Shariah family arbitration argued that the
reforms would give legitimacy and an unenforceable appearance of oversight to a
legal code they say is - at its heart - unfair to women.
McGuinty said the debate around Shariah gave his government time to "step
back a little bit" and look at the original decision to allow religious
arbitrations in Ontario.
"It became pretty clear that was not in keeping with the desire of
Ontarians to build on common ground. . .of one law for all Ontarians," he
said.
The premier said his wife Terri had not raised the Shariah law issue with him
during the lengthy debate, but noted the 17 women in his Liberal caucus urged
him to reject the idea.
Just hours before McGuinty's announcement, a group including author Margaret
Atwood, activist Maude Barlow, writer June Callwood and actresses Shirley
Douglas and Sonja Smits issued an open letter to the premier on behalf of the No
Religious Arbitration Coalition.
During last Thursday's protests, angry demonstrators outside the Ontario
legislature likened McGuinty to Afghanistan's former extremist Taliban leaders
for even considering Shariah.
Speakers in Toronto called McGuinty naive for saying women's rights would not be
trampled if Ontario allowed Shariah, while 100 people braved the rain in
Montreal to protest the use of Shariah law in Ontario. Similar rallies were held
in Ottawa and Victoria, while smaller protests were held in London, Amsterdam,
Paris and Dusseldorf, Germany.
Tarek Fatah, head of the Muslim Canadian Congress, which has called for reforms
within Canada's more traditional Muslim organizations, called McGuinty's
surprise announcement "a great victory for all Canadians, but particularly
Muslims in Canada, and a defeat for Islamic fundamentalists and those who are
preaching it in Canada."
© The Canadian Press 2005