The director of human rights charity CAGE repeatedly refused to
condemn the stoning to death of women for adulterous behavior during a
television interview.
Asim Qureshi appeared on the BBC’s This Week program, where he was asked a series of questions about treatment of women advocated by a Muslim scholar, including female genital mutilation (FGM) and stoning for adultery.
The show’s presenter Andrew Neil asked Qureshi to condemn the series of opinions, currently prevalent in the so-called Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) and other terror organizations under their interpretation of Sharia law.
Qureshi avoided committing himself, arguing: “I’m not a theologian,” adding “I have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.”
Note EU-Digest: It is people like Asim Qureshi who make Islam look bad, specially for Muslim women.
Read more: ‘Sharia isn’t practiced correctly’: CAGE director refuses to condemn death by stoning — RT UK
Asim Qureshi appeared on the BBC’s This Week program, where he was asked a series of questions about treatment of women advocated by a Muslim scholar, including female genital mutilation (FGM) and stoning for adultery.
The show’s presenter Andrew Neil asked Qureshi to condemn the series of opinions, currently prevalent in the so-called Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) and other terror organizations under their interpretation of Sharia law.
Qureshi avoided committing himself, arguing: “I’m not a theologian,” adding “I have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.”
Note EU-Digest: It is people like Asim Qureshi who make Islam look bad, specially for Muslim women.
Read more: ‘Sharia isn’t practiced correctly’: CAGE director refuses to condemn death by stoning — RT UK
No comments:
Post a Comment