The need of Uniform Islamic Constitution for the Muslim Ummah: A study of Islamic provisions on the Constitution of selected countries

Authors

  • Md Abdul Awal Khan Lecturer, Department of Law, International Islamic University Chittagong.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3329/iiucs.v3i0.2665

Keywords:

Islamic constitution, Muslim Ummah

Abstract

Islam is a complete code of life as stated in the holy Quran (3:19), which is the prime source of Islamic Constitution. Al-Quran, therefore, regulates the life of a human being and Constitution for the Muslim Ummah to govern their country. Hazrat Muhammad (sm) taught the Muslims to maintain, preserve, consolidate and to strengthen fraternal relations and unity among Muslims which was extended to the Khulafa-e-Rashedin regime and then Abbasid and Osmania Khilafat. At that time Muslim states were governed according to the provisions of Al-Quran and Sunnah. But at present, the Muslim Countries have departed from the Al-Quran and Sunnah. Muslims Ummah lost its central power with the end of Osmania Khilafat. Later many Muslim territory became independent one after another but they imposed more importance on geographical position, language, culture and history rather than Islam. They included in their Constitution secular, socialist, capitalist ideology and they touched some Islamic provisions in their Constitution just to give it Islamic colour. Many Muslim states have enacted many anti-Islamic provisions in their Constitution too. This article is aimed at finding and highlighting such provisions and to make a comparison among selected Constitutions of Muslim states. This article also suggests the Muslim states to enact uniform Constitution for the Muslim Ummah.  

doi: 10.3329/iiucs.v3i0.2665  

IIUC STUDIES Vol. - 3, December 2006 (p 63-72)  

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
162
PDF
844

Downloads

How to Cite

Khan, M. A. A. (2009). The need of Uniform Islamic Constitution for the Muslim Ummah: A study of Islamic provisions on the Constitution of selected countries. IIUC Studies, 3, 63–72. https://doi.org/10.3329/iiucs.v3i0.2665

Issue

Section

Articles - English Section