logo
ADVERTISEMENT

Gender advocate mulls key reforms in Kenya’s Kadhi court system

He said gender sensitivity training and rights of appeal are emphasized in the white paper.

image
by BOSCO MARITA

News12 April 2025 - 15:04
ADVERTISEMENT

In Summary


  • Sharrif said the white paper aims to align  Islamic family law with the 2010 Constitution and International human rights norms.
  • The gender advocate said the White paper recommends mandatory law degrees and Arabic proficiency for all Kadhis, with at least 10 to 15 years of experience in family law and Shariah.

Gender justice advocate Abdulwali Shariff . [PHOTO: HANDOUT]

Gender justice advocate Abdulwali Shariff has released a white paper proposing sweeping constitutional and legal reforms to Kenya's Kadhi court system.

In a statement to newsrooms on Saturday, Sharrif said the white paper aims to align  Islamic family law with the 2010 Constitution and International human rights norms.

"The paper calls for an end to instant triple talaq, unregulated polygamy and the use of Nikam as a sex contract. These practices, it argues, compromise women’s dignity and violate Quranic principles of justice," Shariff said in a statement.

The gender advocate said the White paper recommends mandatory law degrees and Arabic proficiency for all Kadhis, with at least 10 to 15 years of experience in family law and Shariah.

He said gender sensitivity training and rights of appeal are emphasized in the white paper.

Shariff said the white paper further proposes banning instant talaq, introducing court-supervised divorce with mandatory reconciliation and making marriage contracts enforceable documents detailing rights and obligations.

He said the gender justice measures are the formation of a gender Justice Advisory Board with female scholars and lawyers, provision of legal and public education for women and civil remedies for post-divorce financial and emotional harm.

"Drawing from reforms in countries like Morocco, Tunisia, India, South Africa and Turkey the proposal emphasizes a return to qur’anic principles of fairness while embracing modern legal standards," Shariff said.

He said the white paper urges lawmakers, civil society, religious leaders and international human rights bodies to champion a constitutional amendment that secures gender equality in religious courts.

Shariff said he plans a multipronged campaign involving high court petitions and private member bills, public debates, mosque workshops, media outreach and partnerships with UN Women and global Islamic reformers.#

He said he proposed the white paper based on personal experience and male-dominated society.

ADVERTISEMENT

logo© The Star 2024. All rights reserved