The
charter and the proclamations and the resolutions of the United
Nations cannot be compared with the rights sanctioned by God;
because the former are not applicable on anybody while the latter
are applicable on every believer. They are a part and parcel
of the Islamic Faith. Every Muslim or administrator who claims
himself to be Muslim, will have to accept, recognize and enforce
them. If they fail to enforce them, and start denying the rights
that have been guaranteed by God or make amendments and changes
in them, or practically violate them while paying lip service
to them, the verdict of the Holy Quran for such government is
clear and unequivocal:
"Those
who do not judge by what God has sent down are the disbelievers."
(5:44)
HUMAN
RIGHTS IN AN ISLAMIC STATE
1.
The Security Of Life & Property - In the address which the
Prophet delivered on the occasion of the Farewell Hajj, he said:
"Your lives and properties are forbidden to one another till
you meet your Lord on the Day of Resurrection." The Prophet
has also said about the dhimmis (the non-Muslim citizens of
the Muslim state): "One who kills a man under covenant (i.e.,
dhimmi) will not even smell the fragrance of Paradise."
2.
The Protection of Honor - The Holy Quran lays down:
- "You
who believe, do not let one (set of) people make fun of another
set."
- "Do
not defame one another."
- "Do
not insult by using nicknames."
- "Do
not backbite or speak ill of one another." (49:11-12)
3.Sanctity
& Security of Private Life - The Quran has laid down the
injunction:
- "Do
not spy on one another." (49:12)
- "Do
not enter any houses unless you are sure of their occupant's
consent." (24:27)
4.
The Security Of Personal Freedom: - Islam has laid down
the principle that no citizen can be imprisoned unless his guilt
has been proven in an open court. To arrest a man only on the
basis of suspicion and to throw him into a prison without proper
court proceedings and without providing him a reasonable opportunity
to produce his defense is not permissible in Islam.
5.
The Right To Protest Against Tyranny: - Among the rights
that Islam has conferred on human beings is the right to protest
against government's tyranny. Referring to it the Quran says:
"God
does not love evil talk in public unless it is by someone who
has been injured thereby." (4:148)
In Islam, as has been argued earlier, all power and authority
belong to God, and with man there is only delegated power which
becomes a trust; everyone who becomes a recipient of such a
power has to stand in awful reverence before his people toward
whom and for whose sake he will be called upon to use these
powers. This was acknowledged by Hazrat Abu Bakr who said in
his very first address: "Cooperate with me when I am right
but correct me when I commit error; obey me so long as I follow
the commandments of Allah and His Prophet; but turn away from
me when I deviate."
6. Freedom Of Expression: Islam gives the right of freedom
of thought and expression to all citizens of the Islamic state
on the condition that it should be used for the propagation
of virtue and truth and not for spreading evil and wickedness.
The Islamic concept of freedom of expression is much superior
to the concept prevalent in the West. Under no circumstances
would Islam allow evil and wickedness to be propagated. It also
does not give anybody the right to use abusive or offensive
language in the name of criticism. It was the practice of the
Muslims to enquire from the Holy Prophet whether on a certain
matter a divine injunction had been revealed to him. If he said
that he had received no divine injunction, the Muslims freely
expressed their opinion on the matter. |