Apostasy case: Former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey calls on
British Muslim leaders to back the right to convert from Islam
Lord Carey said some ex-Muslims in the UK were forced to ‘almost go underground’
The Independent | Sunday 18 May 2014
Lord Carey, the former
Archbishop of Canterbury, has called on leading British Muslims to
support the right to convert from Islam to another religion after a
court in Sudan sentenced a woman to death for apostasy.
The peer said it was “accepted doctrine” that Muslim converts should
face the death penalty. He also said there were examples of ex-Muslims
in Britain who had been forced to “almost go underground”.
“Isn’t
there something fundamentally wrong with Islam at its core that it
cannot allow people to change their religion?” he told The Sunday
Times.
“It is accepted doctrine in Islam [that] you don’t convert
and if you do the penalty may be death.” He added: “I want to hear
Muslim leaders say ‘we allow Muslims to become Christians if they wish
to’.”
Lord Carey spoke out after Meriam Ibrahim, 27, was sentenced to death by a sharia court in Sudan after refusing to recant her Christian faith. The sentence has been suspended as she is pregnant.
But a leading British Muslim thinker Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui told The Independent that the Koran said people should have the freedom of religion.
The
idea that former Muslims should be put to death was introduced later as
part of “man-made sharia” law, he said, adding that the issue was being
debated by Muslim scholars around the world.
“I think hopefully
at some stage consensus will emerge that this is a very divisive,
anti-pluralism approach and it must be abandoned,” he said. “The basic
rule of the Koran is there is freedom [of religion]… the basic rule of
Islam is there’s no compulsion in religion.”
Asked whether
Muslims should be allowed to convert, Dr Siddiqui, a fellow of the
Muslim Institute, said they “should be allowed to do whatever they
want”.
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