Yahoo – AFP,
December 13, 2017
A Muslim cleric accused of issuing a fatwa banning women from working on farms has been arrested in Bangladesh, police said Wednesday.
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| A labour shortage has meant millions of women now work in the fields during harvest in Bangladesh (AFP Photo/Farjana KHAN GODHULY) |
A Muslim cleric accused of issuing a fatwa banning women from working on farms has been arrested in Bangladesh, police said Wednesday.
The imam
and five mosque officials face charges after their announcement prompted locals
in the western town of Kumarkhali to try and prevent women from going to work
in the fields.
"They
took the decision after prayers on Friday, banning women from going out of
their homes," local police chief Abdul Khaleque told AFP.
"They
used the mosque's loudspeakers that evening to spread the news."
Muslim-majority
Bangladesh is officially secular, but Muslim clerics are hugely influential,
particularly in the more socially conservative rural areas of the country.
Fatwas were
banned in 2001, but the nation's highest court in 2011 ruled that they could be
issued on personal and religious matters if they did not impose physical
punishment.
Rights
groups have criticised that ruling, saying villages far from Bangladesh's
secular courts use fatwas to issue sentences that go against the nation's laws.
Women were
once largely confined to the home in rural Bangladesh, but a labour shortage
has meant millions now work in the fields during harvest or crop sowing season.
Women also
account for some 80 percent of four million workers in the country's 4,500
textile plants -- the mainstay of the impoverished nation's economy.
Police said
the six arrested would face charges under the special powers act, a
controversial military-era law.

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