News
Muslim Leaders Launch Petition Drive Against Supreme Court Inheritance Ruling
Beyond seeking to overturn the current ruling, the group is also pushing for elevation of the Chief Kadhi’s office to High Court level to strengthen its judicial authority.
Religious group vows to collect one million signatures challenging decision on children born out of wedlock
A coalition of Muslim leaders in Kenya has launched a campaign to overturn a Supreme Court ruling that grants inheritance rights to children born outside marriage, announcing plans to collect one million signatures in opposition to the decision.
The protest emerged during Friday prayers at Sakina mosque in Mvita constituency, where religious leaders denounced the ruling as an attack on Islamic law and the constitutional authority of Kadhi courts.
Sheikh Abu Qatada, who serves as both an imam and chairman of the Pwani Patriotic Religious Leaders, led the criticism, arguing the Supreme Court had overstepped its bounds by interfering with religious jurisdiction over inheritance matters.
“This ruling is against Islam. Where is the freedom of worship?” Qatada said, emphasizing that the Constitution grants Kadhi courts authority over inheritance, marriage, and divorce issues within the Muslim community.
The religious leaders warned the ruling could undermine the entire Kadhi court system, which operates parallel to civil courts to handle personal status matters for Muslims according to Islamic law.
Muslim scholar and activist Athman Sharif raised concerns the decision might encourage extramarital relationships, claiming it could lead to women having children outside marriage specifically to claim inheritance rights from Muslim families.
The campaign has drawn political support, with Mombasa Woman Representative Zamzam Mohamed publicly backing the religious leaders’ position. “I will always stand on the side of my religion. That ruling should be reviewed,” she stated.
The Muslim leaders issued an ultimatum to elected officials, with activist Mohamed Abubakar warning that Muslim politicians must either support the review effort or risk losing community backing.
Beyond seeking to overturn the current ruling, the group is also pushing for elevation of the Chief Kadhi’s office to High Court level to strengthen its judicial authority.
The controversy highlights ongoing tensions between civil law and religious law in Kenya’s legal system, where the Constitution recognizes both secular courts and specialized religious courts for personal status matters.
Kenya Insights allows guest blogging, if you want to be published on Kenya’s most authoritative and accurate blog, have an expose, news TIPS, story angles, human interest stories, drop us an email on [email protected] or via Telegram
-
Investigations2 weeks agoForged Legacy: How Kaplan and Stratton’s Peter Gachuhi Is Accused of Faking a Top AG’s Will as State Claims Damning Evidence
-
Business2 weeks agoSold And Abandoned: How Diageo and Asahi Are Locking Kenya’s EABL Minority Shareholders Out Of East Africa’s Biggest Corporate Heist
-
Business2 weeks agoHow Firm Linked To Mombasa Tycoon Jaffer Was Allowed To Import Fuel At Bloated Price And Set To Make Billions In Profits From Iranian War Crisis In Kenya
-
Business2 weeks agoPoison at the Pump: How Kenya’s Fuel Marking System May Be Exposing Millions to Cancer-Causing Chemicals
-
Investigations1 week agoThe Teflon Company: How Gulf Energy’s Insiders Built Billions on Kenya’s Fuel, and Walked Away Clean
-
Investigations1 week agoTHE ZAKHEM-ECOBANK MACHINE: How Kenya’s Courts Were Weaponised to Drain a State Corporation of Over KES 78 Billion
-
News6 days agoMombasa Lawyer Exposed In Sh600 Million Alleged Double-Dealing Diani Property Transaction
-
Investigations2 weeks agoInside Nyayo House: The Kitchen Cartel That Demands Sh100,000 for a Stove
