Sharia Controversy Rumbles On
For close watch on the topic of Sharia law I defer to John Bolch who posts regularly. This article however was of particular interest because it reported that a Junior Minister recently suggested that whilst Sharia Law is not going to gain jurisdiction in the UK in family matters, it is always possible for agreements reached in Sharia courts to be submitted to English courts as consent orders. The Times article notes that the reporting of this possibility has been criticised and so it should be.
The difficulty lies in the very nature of consent orders which, whilst judicial acts, are ultimately the least safe exercise of judicial discretion. The reality of everyday court life is that when a proposed consent order is placed before the Judge, there is indeed a cursory check of the information before the court to ensure that the order is fair, however rarely is there any in-depth investigation and the court relies upon the truthfulness of the parties and the skill of the parties’ advisors.
The danger is that whilst agreements reached via a Sharia law ”mediation” (or indeed any other type of mediation) may appear superficially fair, such that they get approved by an English Judge; there may very well be different principles etc brought into play. There is a risk that women used to being subservient may well see a financial settlement as ‘fair’ yet without proper financial disclosure in a Sharia court the Husband is then free to put what he wishes in the English disclosure and all the Judge will see will be two parties in agreement. Likewise in relation to orders regarding children, those used to being subservient may well be subject to principles which might offend English law in reaching an agreement that, to an outsider, is not inherently wrong without investigation of the actual circumstances.
The truth is that mediation other than under Sharia works because there is faith that mediators have remained neutral and ensured the parties truly consent and are not pressured. Sharia court mediations (let alone hearings) are implictly dangerous due to the different starting premises that apply (a woman’s role is in the home etc), and the position women often find themselves in whilst ending relationships (ostracised, used to being underdogs etc).
Recognising anything to do with Sharia Law is inherently complicated and there is a great risk if the waters are muddied, as suggested by the Junior Minister, injustices will occur which, particularly in family law, could have devastaing consequences for the lives of those involved. The true difficulty is that unless the parties tell the Judge that Sharia was used he would be none the wiser.