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Malaysia PM called on Islamic banking to work on clarifying and resolving conflicts in interpretation over what products are allowed under religious laws.

The global economic crisis presents an opportunity for Islamic banking to show it is a viable alternative to conventional finance, Malaysia's premier said according to reports Wednesday.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said the meltdown showed the need for laws enshrined in Islamic banking, which prohibits speculation and high levels of debt, and which has so far been relatively unscathed by the credit crunch.

"These ethical and moral safeguards are missing in the conventional system," Abdullah said in a speech, adding that the crisis was caused by trade in loans which few truly understood.

"In reality these repackaged sub-prime loans were nothing more than artful works of deception that fed the speculative excesses and hubris in the financial markets," he said at the launch of an Islamic law research academy.

However, he called on Islamic banking -- a booming 1.0 trillion dollar global industry -- to work on clarifying and resolving conflicts in interpretation over what products are allowed under religious laws.

"The Islamic finance community should not be complacent or unduly proud. We must continue to critically evaluate ourselves," he said according to the state Bernama news agency.

"For instance, have we truly established an alternative system or are we still very much mimicking the established conventional system?"

Islamic law prohibits the payment and collection of interest, which is seen as a form of gambling, so highly complex instruments such as derivatives and other creative accounting practices are banned.

There have been calls for the conventional banking industry to take a leaf out of the book of Islamic finance, which also shuns investments in gaming, alcohol and pornography in favour of ethical investments.

Agencies

 
Home arrow Alerts arrow Press Release: VISIT OF PALESTINIAN PARTIES OF ISRAEL
Press Release: VISIT OF PALESTINIAN PARTIES OF ISRAEL PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 09 October 2008

The Media Review Network welcomes a group of prominent Palestinian politicians and senior academics who are in Gauteng to study South Africa's transition to democracy.

The 12-person delegation includes representatives of all the Arab political parties of Israel, including 3 secretaries general and other senior party activists, as well as 3 leading Palestinian academics from Israeli universities. The Arab parties represent Palestinians who live in Israel as citizens but experience systematic discrimination as non-Jews in a Jewish state. The delegation has come to learn about South African apartheid and the ANC struggle, seeking insight into their own experience of discrimination in Israel and new ideas for resisting it.

During their two-week programme, they will have talks from senior ANC and other political veterans and will tour key sites of struggle like Constitution Hill and Soweto.

Members of the delegation represent a political spectrum and have varying views on the Palestinian–Israeli conflict. All are experts on discrimination against Palestinian citizens of Israel and can discuss problems regarding housing, services, jobs, education, and health care.

They are available to share their views with South Africans who may be interested in Middle Eastern Affairs via radio and / or television appearances. Interested persons should contact Orna Kohn at 012 370 7000 (Velmore Hotel: Room 22)


** Issued By:

Ibrahim Vawda
Senior Researcher
Media Review Network
012 374 6987


(Media Review Network is an advocacy group based in Tshwane (Pretoria), South Africa)

 

Last Updated ( Thursday, 09 October 2008 )
 

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