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Well you can rest easy, then, because nothing nefarious is being "allowed". Unless Sapper Bloggins can explain by what tortured logic he came to that conclusion.
Britney Spears said:Huh?
Arbitrators cannot pass binding judgements which are illegal. If your arbitrator tells you not to pay taxes for next year, you think the gummint is going to stand by idle?
Are you even vaguely familiar with the due proccess leading up to an agreement to arbitration?
If a Sharia court passes judgement that a muslim woman may devorce her husband, but that he will receive all their posessions, do you really suppose she'll get offended and take it to a different court?
Or is it more likely she'll cave to social pressure?
While the findings of these courts may not be enforced by the Canadian legal system, they will be enforced by cultural/social pressure. Certainly, that pressure already exists, however, by officialy reckognizing Sharia law as an alternative to our own civil courts, we're giving it legitemacy and making it even harder for these individuals to integrate into our society.
speaking strictly for myself, the only reason I'm taking an interest at all is because of the number of Muslim groups that are dead-set against it. Makes me go "hmmm".Britney Spears said:the ONLY reason why this is even news is because it involved *gasp* Muslims.
what is more, a statute will be created to permit this sort of activity, and the statute will contain the route of appeal for any decision- but I would hope it contains a weak privity clause which might allow the instant and automatic stay of the arbitrators decision pending determination of the appeal.
I would also like to see provision for third party intervention into all appeals so that women are not prevented from appealing due to lack of financial capability.
Where a court overturns an arbitrators decision, I would like to see the arbitrator responsible for all legal costs of the appeal on a substantial indemnity scale.
But what I would really like is for the issue to go away and an outright ban on any non-progressive foolishness such as Sharia and other such non-essential religious accommodation in the judicial system.
Britney Spears said:Why a new statute? Why not just use the existing Commercial/Divorce Arbitration Acts? They are all as secular as we could want. In fact, I think that this would be counter productive and appear to give Muslim arbiters special treatment, I'm definitely against that.
Hmm, who determines the criterea for this? I'm not against this in principle but it seems rather difficult to implement. By the same reasoning, you should also extend the provision to intervene in arbitration between individuals and large corporations then? I'm a little hazy on the details here, is there such a provision in place, beyond the usual "duress" stuff?
Sounds good too. I'm not really sure if anything is even changed here. On the other hand, private arbitrations are still private, if both parties agree to a Mullah for an arbitrator, is it the gummint's role to determine the fitness of the arbitrator? Wouldn't this be discrimination on the basis of religion?
In initial comments to the media in late 2003 Syed Mumtaz Ali, president of the IICJ(Islamic Institute for Civil Justice), stated, "[n]ow, once an arbitrator decides cases, it is final and binding. The parties can go to the local secular Canadian court asking that it be enforced. The court has no discretion in the matter. The...impracticality [not being allowed to use Sharia] has been removed. In settling disputes, there is no choice but to have an arbitration board."2
...Syed Mumtaz Ali's statements, and the statements of members of the Muslim community who took a position supporting the IICJ proposal, suggested that the government had given some form of special permission to the IICJ to undertake its project. The idea that government had
approved the use of Sharia began winding its way into the public consciousness. The mistaken belief that the government had recently made changes to the law on arbitrations was widely disseminated through the public press and electronic media.4
The idea that the IICJ legitimately held some form of coercive power which would allow it to force Muslims in Ontario to arbitrate according to Islamic personal law instead of using the traditional court route to resolve disputes was formed as a direct result of the pronouncements of the IICJ. That this declaration appears to have been taken at face value by both the Muslim community and the broader community is particularly troublesome.
...It bears repetition that, in spite of perceptions to the contrary, the government had not amended or introduced any legislation or regulations that allowed the IICJ to conduct arbitrations according to Islamic personal law. Rather, the structure of the Arbitration Act itself created this possibility. In fact, the government had never been in contact with or heard of the IICJ until early 2004.
Actually, I think this is going to be an amendment to the Family Law Act. Currently the Act provides for mediation, not arbitration. I am not sure of the applicability of the Arbitration Act* to family law, but I don't think it is specifically excluded. [don't know, not involved in family law at all]
The intervention would occur in the judicial process, not the arbitration process. Intervenor status is provided for in Charter cases, however I think it ought to be broadened where religious principles are engaged vis fundamental human rights.
Typically, qualified arbitrators for labour etc. are appointed to a roster by the AG or the respective line ministry of government. Often, it is a patronage appointment. Arbitration authorized by statute and regulated by government has the force of law subject to judicial review. Unauthorized or unregulated private arbitration does not have the force of law- such private events are commonly referred to as alternative dispute resolution.
What the government and Boyd are attempting to do is give Sharia the force of law in Canada, and that is a very dangerous precedent which could result in courts attempting interpret Sharia law, and perhaps eventually applying certain aspects of Sharia into other areas of family law by stealth or inadvertence.
Maybe I'm misinterpreting here, but when did religious principles ever engage vis The Charter? In simple terms, if the female party of a divorce arbitration feels that she has been handed an unfair ruling based on her gender, which is protected by the Charter, and can prove as much, the whole arbitration is illegal, is it not?
you forget the responsibility to convert dar-al-harb, and the fact that immigrants, for the most part, don't want a different lifestyle, they want a higher standard of living while continuing to live as they were raised in their home country.Infanteer said:If the lack of its use here represents a serious hampering of their lifestyle, then wouldn't they want to head back to a place where its use is the norm for that particular society?
Glad you've taken some time to do a little more reading Britney Spears Kiss
Britney Spears said:Well, now that I've done it so you don't have to, why do you still insist on being wrong?