The Saudi Arabian Legal
System
Firm Alliance between Rulers and
Scholars
When a woman who had been raped was sentenced to
imprisonment and strokes of the lash in Saudi Arabia in November, the Saudi
leadership found itself confronted with a wave of criticism. But how realistic
are demands for reform? The Islam scholar Guido Steinberg examines the Saudi
legal system| Bild:

Saudi Arabia's
King Abdullah has pardoned the victim of a gang rape this week, whose sentence
sparked international condemnation |
In mid-November 2007, a court in the Saudi Arabian city of Qatif
doubled the punishment imposed on a woman who had illegally been alone in a car
with a man who was unrelated to her. Her sentence was raised from ninety to 200
strokes of the lash and she was given an additional six months in prison. Her
lawyer had already appealed against the original sentence.
His reason
was that in the incident, which took place in 2006, the woman (now twenty) and
her companion had been the victims of a multiple rape by seven men who had
already been sentenced to terms of imprisonment of between five and seven
years.
To a certain extent, the "girl of Qatif", as she is now known
throughout Saudi Arabia, was lucky. Several Saudi Arabian legal scholars are of
the opinion that she should have been sentenced to death for fornication (zina).
The case was attracted public interest throughout the world, and lent force to
calls for a reform of the Saudi Arabian justice system.
Priority for
religious lawIndeed the case follows the standard legal opinions in
Saudi Arabia. Women may not be together with men who are not related to them.
And adultery is punished by the death penalty (at least for the woman
involved).
Religious law as defined by religious scholars (ulama) has
general validity in Saudi Arabia. The scholar-judges in the religious courts,
known mostly in the West as Sharia courts, claim general jurisdiction. Although
in fact an area where secular law applies has emerged, that makes no difference
to the principle that religious law has priority.
This distinguishes the
Saudi Arabian legal and justice systems fundamentally from those of other Arab
countries, where the constitution usually includes a clause under which Sharia
is defined as one or even the source of legal opinion, but where this verbal
concession has little influence on a largely secular legal
system.
Alliance of rulers and scholarsThe strong position
of religious scholars in Saudi Arabian justice goes back to the alliance between
the ruling family and the scholars. In 1744/5, the religious reformer Muhammad
Ibn Abdalwahhab (1703 – 1792) forged an alliance with the then ruler Muhammad
Ibn Saud (died 1765), and that alliance was the basis of the Saudi Arabian
state.
The Wahhabiya, as the Abdalwahhab's reform movement is usually
known, is a radical purist movement which only recognises as Muslim those who
follow its rules of behaviour in detail and accept without question its
theological views. They believe that the Koran and the Sunna offer a detailed,
accurate picture of an idealised early history of the "pious ancestors"
(as-salaf as-salih), the first Muslims in Mecca and Medina; and they try
unquestioningly to put God's word literally into action.
This includes,
according to Wahhabi principles, the five-times-daily prayer in the mosque, the
ban on music, tobacco and silk clothing, as well as the exclusion of women as
far as possible from public life. It was part of the agreement between the
founders of the Saudi Arabian state that the scholars would have control, not
only over the narrow religious and religio-political spheres, but also over
education and justice, and that they would oversee public morality.
Until
well into the twentieth century, the scholars largely succeeded in defending
their privileges against attempts by the Saudi state to extend the areas under
its control.
Under these conditions, the traditional Saudi Arabian
justice system was largely decentralised. A judge educated in religious law
would decide all the cases brought in a particular place. In practical terms the
judge was under the control of the leading Wahhabi scholars in
Riyadh.
Non-religious legal institutionsOnly in the course
of the increasing centralisation and modernisation of the state in the twentieth
century was a strong justice system with a clear hierarchy created. Bench
courts, appeal structures and majority verdicts were introduced. Scholars were
tied into an increasingly bureaucratic justice system, which was controlled
centrally by their leading representatives in Riyadh.
This strong
centralisation reflected the interests of the Saudi rulers whose influence on
the Saudi Arabian justice system has traditionally been strong.
In
addition, in the course of the twentieth century, the Saudi ruling family
established a parallel secular justice sector, which for the first time was not
controlled by the scholars. If the Saudi state wanted to guarantee the
functioning of trade in the province of Hijaz, which includes the cities of
Mecca, Medina and especially Jeddah and which it conquered in 1925, it had to
take over the accepted procedures. Already in 1926, a council of trade was
founded in Jeddah – a tribunal with legal authority which had existed in the
Ottoman period.
Five years later, there followed a trade law and in the
following decades the Saudi rulers introduced a large number of non-religious
legal institutions. This was necessary in the first place because the legal
system was extended by the promulgation of regulations. Although these
regulations were called decrees, not laws, since according to the Wahhabi view,
only God can give laws, in practical terms, they were a compromise between
Wahhabi ideology and the need to develop new laws.
At least in theory,
these regulations or decrees were not to be contrary to Sharia.
Strict
pursuance of legal principlesIn the field of religious law in Saudi
Arabia, it is still the Hanbali school of jurisprudence which dominates, as it
did 250 years ago. It is the smallest of the four Sunni schools of canon law and
has its traditional strongholds in Central Arabia, Damascus, Baghdad and Nablus.
However, it was always a major aim of the Wahhabis to avoid the independent
determination of the law by the scholars (ijtihad), in favour of the strict
pursuance of the legal principles of a particular school of law
(taqlid).
Instead of making use the widely-adopted Hanbali legal
compendia, the judges were to base their rulings ideally on the Koran and the
Sunna, which make up the totality of the traditions (hadith) about the
statements and acts of the Prophet Mohammed. In this, Abdalwahhad and his
followers were conforming to the views of the founder of the Hanbaliya, Ahmad b.
Hanbal (780/1 – 855), who himself was more a scholar of the Hadith than of the
law, and who never intended to found a legal school.
In reality however,
the judges in Saudi Arabia have always been and continue to be guided almost
entirely by the opinions of the major Hanbali legal compendia.
In
practice, it was only the leading scholars of the kingdom who had the privilege
of asserting an independent process of determining law. Based in Riyadh, they
tried to assert centralised control over the Saudi Arabian legal process in a
way which was supportive of the interests of the state.
Codification
of the lawThe Saudi state nevertheless made efforts to extent its
control further by trying to codify Hanbali law. A proposal to this effect by
Ibn Saud (1901 – 1953) failed as a result of the resistance of the Wahhabi
scholars. In many other areas, the scholars were forced to bow to the will of
the Saudi rulers, and they exhibited in the course of the twentieth century
considerable pragmatism.
A codification however would have restricted the
principle of the right to free decision on the basis of the Koran and the Sunna.
The scholars made it clear that they considered this to be a fundamental
principle of Wahhabi reform, and they were thus able to assert their point of
view successfully.
Legal opinion in Saudi Arabia continues to be
consistently based on religious law interpreted according to Hanbali principles
– and in matters of public morality, this takes a particularly strict view. Had
"the girl of Qatif" been convicted of illegal sexual intercourse (zina), she
would have even run the risk of the death sentence. Fornication (among women) is
a crime which is mentioned in the Koran (hadd, plu. hudud), and which can be
punished by death. But the court dismissed the charge of
fornication.
Reform of justice and lawThe calls for
reforms in the justice and legal systems in Saudi Arabia may seem understandable
against such a background. But such calls are unrealistic, since justice and law
in today's Saudi Arabia are only reformable to a very limited degree. In October
2007, the government indeed announced wide ranging reforms, which however will
above all intensify state control, and ensure legal security in the business
sector.
The reforms will affect the secular legal area and the
organisation of religious justice. The content of the religious legal area will
not be touched. A reform of justice and law in Saudi Arabia which would make
cases such as that of "the girl of Qatif" impossible would require a massive
restriction in the power of the religious scholars. That would only be possible
if the justice system were to be largely secularised and the areas in which
Islamic law were applied were reduced to a minimum.
But on account of the
alliance between the rulers and the scholars in Saudi Arabia, this is
impossible. As long as the legitimacy of the Saudi Arabian state is based on the
alliance between the rulers and the scholars, the role of religious law will
continue to be a major one.
Guido Steinberg
© Qantara.de 2007
Translated from the German by Michael Lawton
Guido Steinberg
studied history, Islamic studies and politics at the Universities of Cologne,
Bonn, Damascus and at the Free University of Berlin. Between 2002 and 2005 he
worked in the German Chancellery, and is now with the German Institute for
International and Security Affairs in Berlin.
Qantara.deAbdullahi Ahmed
An-Naim
"The
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Abdullahi Ahmed An-Naim, the application of the Sharia, as propagated by
current-day Islamists, contradicts international law. Cem Say has spoken with
him on the compatibility of Sharia with modern life
Sharia Rulings and
Violence against Women
The
Islamic Principles of Equality Sharia law is often abused to justify the
inferior position in Muslim society, says Hassan Rezaei, expert in Islamic law.
In order to change this, he argues, one ought to apply the Islamic tradition of
universal equality
The Role of Wahabi Scholars in Saudi Arabia
Political
Islam Hindering Reform In order to ensure its power, the leadership in
the Saudi capital Riyadh continues to uphold its alliance with Wahabi scholars.
Guido Steinberg says this policy prevents the country from engaging in any
fundamental reform
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