"Sharia finance" does exactly what it promises, financing the spread of
sharia — and terror.
By Alex Alexiev
If you’ve seen Geert Wilders’s film Fitna, you may not have noticed a
single headline amongst all the bombings, beheadings, and earnest
expressions of Islam’s eventual world domination: Halal-fund:
investments for Muslims. But the investment vehicles referenced are an
essential part of radical Islam’s efforts to insinuate itself into
Western societies in order to destroy them from within. And Wall
Street, barely out of the woods from its disastrous run-in with
sub-prime mortgages — and having lost one of its historic investment
houses, Bear Stearns, in the process — is now chasing the very kind of
“sharia finance” against which Wilders's movie warns, a business line
that may eventually wind up being even more calamitous than the
subprime-mortgage fiasco.
For the growing army of its acolytes, who salivate at the prospect of
tens of billions of dollars in transaction fees from the burgeoning
industry, sharia-compliant finance is seen as little more than a cuddly
Islamic version of socially conscious investment — with ethical
strictures forbidding usury and sin industries, and emphasizing
charity. Indeed, a conference on the subject last Fall co-sponsored by
the Wall Street Journal was titled just that: “Islamic Ethical
Investment.” According to this rosy interpretation, sharia finance is a
windfall for capital markets — allowing Wall
Street to skim some foam off the ocean of petrodollar liquidity in the
Middle East, and put it to good use.
Other interpretations are possible, of course. Critics see sharia
finance as a massive subversion campaign by radical Islam designed to
legitimize sharia in the West, to undermine our markets, and ultimately
to imperil our free-enterprise system and national security — all the
while exposing banks to financial risks that make the sub-prime fiasco
look like a walk in the park. For its proponents and ideological
enablers — such as the well known suicide-bombing advocate, Sheikh
Yusuf al-Qaradawi — sharia finance is nothing less than “Jihad with
money.” As al-Qaradawi explains, “God has ordered us to fight enemies
with our lives and with our money.” Unfortunately for Wall Street, it’s
hard to argue with the good sheikh on that score. Far from being a
guide to ethical investment, sharia finance is indistinguishable from
sharia itself.
Sharia is a reactionary-to-the-core medieval Islamic doctrine that
claims control over every aspect of every Muslim’s life. It imposes
such “ethical” mandates on Muslims as the obligation to discriminate
against women and non-Muslims; to kill homosexuals, adulterers, and
apostates; to establish and maintain Muslim rule around the world; and
to carry out violent offensive jihad against infidels. Notably, for
those Muslims who cannot engage in physical jihad using force of arms,
sharia requires that they support jihad financially. This is what
sharia finance is all about.
Far from being a legitimate investment vehicle, sharia finance
facilitates religiously sanctioned support for terrorist organizations
— as well as providing radical Islamists with highly paid sinecures as
sharia-finance board advisors in the sanctum sanctorum of capitalism,
all the while that they are pursuing a subversive campaign to destroy
it.
Predictably, none of this is even remotely disclosed by any of the
dozens of Western banks promoting sharia finance today, which obviously
exposes them to huge non-disclosure risks ranging from fraudulent
misrepresentation, to material support for terrorism.
Consider the board chairman of the Dow Jones Islamic Index (IMANX), one
Mufti Taqi Usmani. Mr. Usmani is widely reputed to be one of the
world’s top experts on sharia finance. Whatever his stockpicking
abilities may be, they are dwarfed by his jihadist credentials. A key
executive of Pakistan’s prominent Deobandi jihadist factory, the
madrassa Darul Karoom Karachi (currently headed by his brother, Rafi
Usmani), Taqi Usmani has openly advocated jihad by Muslims in the West,
and just last month again publicly endorsed suicide bombing and the
Taliban.
Since sharia-finance funds like the IMANX may invest in companies that
are not completely halal — that derive their profit from interest or
other sharia-prohibited activities — returns on investment in those
companies must be purified by donating a portion of that ROI to
charity. More often than not, it is people like Usmani who are paid
lucratively to sit on sharia-finance boards in order to determine what
charities will receive the sharia-finance institutions’ donations — and
it’s a fair bet that the March of Dimes is not among them.
IMANX itself is owned and operated by the North American Islamic Trust
(NAIT), an organization listed as an un-indicted co-conspirator by the
Department of Justice in a recent terrorism-finance trial, and the
proprietor of hundreds of radical mosques and Islamic institutions in
the U.S., including some that have been closed down by the government
as criminal enterprises.
The chairman of both NAIT and IMANX, Bassam Osman, has been the top
executive of terrorist-funding organizations like the Quranic Literacy
Institute (suspected financiers of Hamas whose assets were seized by
the U.S. in 1998) and the Islamic Academy of Florida (founded by Sami
al-Arian, a convicted financier of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a
terrorist criminal enterprise), and is a board member of other
un-indicted co-conspirators like the Islamic Society of North America
(ISNA). Is Dow Jones aware of all this? Is Rupert Murdoch? And if they
are not, shouldn’t they be?
The IMANX marketing slogan is “Markets Fluctuate. Principles Don’t.”
Judging by the ideological principles of those involved in its
leadership, that is precisely what Wall Street — and the West — should
fear.
The legitimization of sharia in the West and its gradual imposition in
Muslim communities and beyond is a key objective of sharia finance, and
there is no doubt it has already made huge strides. Indeed, the
precedent of legal sharia-finance transactions was used by the hapless
archbishop of Canterbury to buttress his argument that introducing
sharia in the United Kingdom was unavoidable.
Given the reality of malignant Islamism now spreading into our own
capital markets to the loud cheers of the same Wall Street masters of
the universe who gave us sub-prime mortgage securitization, Americans
have a right to ask: Where are the U.S. Treasury Department and the
SEC, whose job it is to protect our markets? Given the outright
fraudulent misrepresentation of the potential liabilities of
sharia-finance funds under existing regulations, they should get
involved soon.
Original
Source
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