http://africa. reuters.com/ wire/news/ usnL11174744. html

Vatican official says Anglican head naive on Sharia

Tue 11 Mar 2008, 12:47 GMT

By Philip Pullella

ROME, March 11 (Reuters) – The Vatican’s top man for relations with Islam on
Tuesday criticised the Archbishop of Canterbury as mistaken and “naive” for
suggesting that some aspects of Sharia law in Britain were unavoidable.

Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, in a wide-ranging discussion with reporters
about Christian-Muslim relations, also said he was confident that a new,
permanent body between the Vatican and Muslims would help defuse
misunderstandings in the future.

“I think it was a mistake, a mistake because, above all, one has to ask what
type of Sharia. And then, it was a bit naive,” Tauran said in answer to a
question at a breakfast meeting.

Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams sparked a religious and political
storm in Britain and beyond last month when he raised the prospect of
Islamic law in the United Kingdom.

Williams, spiritual leader of the world’s 77 million Anglicans, provoked a
string of tabloid headlines with the best-selling Sun launching a campaign
for him to quit.

“One can understand his good intentions but it seems to me he did not take
into consideration either them (the Muslims), the English juridical system,
or the reality of Sharia,” said Tauran, president of the Vatican’s
Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue.

Sharia, the body of Islamic religious law based primarily on the Koran, as
well as the sayings and deeds of the Prophet Mohammad, has been attacked by
many in the West over its treatment of women and punishments for adultery
and apostasy.

The row fed into a broader debate on integrating Britain’s 1.8 million
Muslims. This issue assumed greater urgency after suicide bombings by
British Muslim militants killed 52 people in London’s transport system in
July 2005.

Tauran said: “It is not just a question of good will. There are juridical
aspects that are not reconcilable (with Sharia)”.

Williams later sought to clarify his position, saying he was not advocating
parallel systems of law and stressed he was not endorsing the harsh
punishments meted out in countries such as Saudi Arabia and Iran.

But he was unrepentant about raising the subject in the first place.

Tauran will be the Vatican’s top man in a permanent official dialogue with
Muslims to improve often difficult relations and heal wounds still open from
a controversial papal speech in 2006.

The Catholic-Muslim Forum, agreed last week, will meet in Rome in November
with 24 religious leaders and scholars from each side. Pope Benedict will
address the group, due to meet formally every two years.

Catholic-Muslim relations nosedived in 2006 after Benedict delivered a
lecture in Regensburg, Germany, that was taken by Muslims to imply that
Islam was violent and irrational.

Asked if meeting every two years was too little, Tauran said committees
would meet more often and have an emergency mechanism.

“There will be a sort of hot line always available if we need to talk and
meet about a problem or take an initiative,” he said.

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