Google – AFP, 30 December 2013
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Pakistan
Federal Shariat Court Chief Justice, Agha Rafiq Ahmed (right) listens
as
Justice Ashraf Jehan (left) reads her oath of office at the sharia court in
Karachi,
on December 30, 2013 (AFP/File)
|
Karachi —
Pakistan's national sharia court, which hears cases under the country's Islamic
legislation, on Monday appointed a female judge for the first time in its
33-year history.
Ashraf
Jehan, 56, who was serving as an additional judge at the high court in southern
Sindh province, made history as she took the oath in Karachi.
"It
was a historic oath-taking ceremony today when an able lady judge had joined
the Shariat Court," Agha Rafiq Ahmed, the chief justice of the Federal
Shariat Court of Pakistan, told AFP.
The court
was established in 1980 during the rule of military dictator Ziaul Haq as part
of a sweeping Islamisation of Pakistan's institutions.
It examines
the country's laws to check them for conformity with Islamic injunctions and
hears appeals under religious legislation known as the "Hudood Laws",
which run parallel to the penal code.
"There
was no bar in the constitution to make a woman the judge of Shariat Court and
there is no discrimination between men and women," Ahmed said.
The chief
justice of the Shariat Court, who rarely speaks to the media, said he was
pleased to comment on an historic moment.
"I
took the initiative as it would send the message in the world that we are
enlightened people and would dispel many misconceptions," he said.

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