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Islamic Legal Analysis of the Zina
Punishment
Islamic Legal Analysis of the Zina Punishment
Awarded to Bariya Ibrahim Magazu, in Zamfara, Nigeria.
By Asifa Quraishi, - January 20, 2001
Question Presented:
Is zina the proper sharia punishment
for an unmarried pregnant girl, who claims that the pregnancy
resulted from unwanted sexual relations with three men in
an arrangement made by her father as payment for his debt?
Short Answer:
The majority shari'a opinion is that pregnancy is not admissible
as proof of zina because it is merely circumstantial evidence.
These jurists reject the element of doubt introduced into
prosecutions based upon circumstantial evidence, especially
for zina, where the Quran specifically demands four eyewitnesses
to such charges. This majority position is the most compelling
one and therefore, the zina conviction against Bariya Ibrahim
Magazu, being based only upon the circumstantial evidence
of her pregnancy, should be overturned.
Even under the minority Islamic legal school (Maliki) which
allows pregnancy as proof of zina, this proof is negated where
there is evidence of coercion, where there is any element
of doubt, or where there is mitigating evidence against punishment
of the particular defendant at hand. In this case, there is
evidence of coercion and doubt, as well as mitigation. Therefore,
the zina charge against Bariya Ibrahim Magazu should not stand.
Analysis:
The crime of zina (consensual extra-marital intercourse) is
a hadd (God-specified) crime established in the Quran. In
Surah al-Nur, the Quran specifically requires four eyewitnesses
to prove the crime of zina. (See Surah 24, verses 2-4). The
issue at the heart of this case is whether other forms of
proof (short of a confession), suffice for this hadd punishment.
Namely, is pregnancy of an unmarried woman itself proof of
zina in the absence of four eyewitnesses?
The majority of the classical schools of Islamic law hold
that unmarried pregnancy, being only circumstantial evidence,
is not admissible as proof of zina.
The majority of the major Islamic schools of law take the
Quranic verses on zina as establishing an exclusive method
of proof of the crime - that is, it must be by eyewitness
testimony (or confession) only. Anything else is merely circumstantial
evidence and not admissible in a hadd prosecution. Thus, unmarried
pregnancy, being neither eyewitness testimony nor confession,
is not admissible as proof in a zina case. This is the position
of the Hanafi, Shafi'i and Hanbali schools of law. (See Muhammad
Ibn Quddamah Al-Maqdisi, Al-Mughni 'Ala Mukhtasar al-Kharaqi,
Vol. 8, p. 129, 145 (1994); see also Ma'amoun M. Salama, General
Principles of Criminal Evidence in Islamic Jurisprudence,
in The Islamic Criminal Justice System, p.110 (M. Cherif Bassiouni,
ed. 1982)).
The majority position is based on the text and spirit of the
Quranic verses on zina and minimizes the introduction of doubt
into these prosecutions, in accordance with fundamental principles
of Islamic hadd jurisprudence.
The majority opinion is based on the view that the Quranic
verses describing evidence in hadd cases establish an exclusive
evidentiary standard. Thus, this view takes seriously the
Quranic condemnation of anyone who charges a woman with zina
and does not bring four eyewitnesses in support of this charge.
(See Quran 24:4) The Quran's specific demand for witnesses
means that this is the only acceptable means of proof of this
hadd in the eyes of God. Based on this reasoning, the Hanafi,
Shafi'i and Hanbali schools of law do not accept any presumptions
or circumstantial evidence such as pregnancy as evidence in
any hadd cases because they contradict the Quranic demand
for testimonial evidence. (See Salama, p. 110-13.)
The majority position rejecting pregnancy as evidence in zina
cases is also based upon the fundamental shar'i principle
that hadd punishments are not to be carried out if there is
any element of doubt. (See Tirmidhi hadith: "idra'u al-hududa
bi'shubhat" ("drop the hudud in all cases of doubt").).
Because circumstantial evidence always entails an element
of doubt, the majority view avoids it in hadd prosecutions.
After all, just as being drunk does not necessarily mean that
one voluntarily consumed alcohol, similarly, the state of
being pregnant does not alone mean that one engaged voluntarily
in consensual extra-marital intercourse. The classical Muslim
scholars acknowledge that one might become pregnant through
other means - for example, unknowing intercourse while asleep,
a mistaken belief of one's marital status, or worse, coercion
to have intercourse against one's will. (See al-Maqdisi, al-Mughni,
vol. 8.) With modern medical advances, this cautionary approach
of the shari'a is commendable, for we now know that one might
become pregnant through artificial insemination where there
is no intercourse at all. The existence of all of these possibilities
introduces an element of doubt into any prosecution for zina
which relies on unmarried pregnancy as evidence. It is for
this reason that the majority of schools of Islamic law wisely
reject pregnancy as evidence of zina.
Finally, the majority position also reinforces the Quranic
protection of women in these verses, an important recurring
theme in Islam. (See Asifa Quraishi, Her Honour: An Islamic
Critique of the Rape Provisions in Pakistan's Ordinance on
Zina, Islamic Studies Occasional Paper #38 (1999) (Islamic
Research Institute, International Islamic University, Islamabad,
Pakistan), attached). Pregnancy, of course, only applies to
women. Yet the Quranic verses specifically assert the need
to protect women against charges of zina with anything short
of four eyewitnesses. If pregnancy is allowed as proof, the
woman-affirming spirit of the Quranic verses is lost.
There is a minority view which allows circumstantial evidence
(such as pregnancy) in hadd cases, but it should not be applied
if other circumstantial evidence probative of truth is excluded.
A minority of Muslim jurists have held that certain types
of circumstantial evidence is allowable in hadd cases. These
scholars reason that the Quranic references to hadd evidence
indicate a general form of proof of anything manifesting the
truth, and is not limited only to the testimony of witnesses.
(See Salama p. 110-11, 120-21.) Imam Malik and reportedly
Imam Ahmad Ibn Hanbal held this view. In zina cases, these
jurists also look to the reported statement of Umar ibn al-Khattab
that "adultery is public when pregnancy appears or confession
is made." (See Abu Da'ud, Sunan, vol. 3. No. 4404.) Thus,
the Maliki school of law admits a variety of types of non-eyewitness
evidence in hadd cases, such as pregnancy in zina cases (see
ad-Dardir, ash-Sharh as-Saghir (Hashiya "Bulghat a-Saliq"
by Ahmad as-Sawi), Vol. 4, p. 454), the smell of wine and
vomiting in prosecutions for alcohol consumption, and hearsay.
(See Salama, p. 115, 121.)
Thus, those jurists who allow circumstantial evidence such
as pregnancy in hadd cases do so with an eye to allowing any
strong non-eyewitness evidence which tends toward the truth.
In the case at hand, therefore, even if the court followed
the minority Maliki view allowing circumstantial pregnancy
evidence as proof of zina, then other circumstantial evidence
of truth should also be allowed, especially evidence that
the intercourse was not consensual (thus negating an essential
element of the crime of zina).
The majority position is the most compelling one and should
be followed in this case.
The majority position disallowing circumstantial evidence
of pregnancy in zina cases is the most compelling one when
viewed in the spirit of the Quranic verses condemning any
accusations of women without four eyewitnesses and the importance
of avoiding doubt in hadd punishmentss. Moreover, it has been
said that Nigeria's own Sokoto caliphate history of taking
the best approaches from all of Shari'a was an inspired approach.
This history should also inform the application of the newly-enacted
hadd criminal codes in Nigeria. Nigerian courts should take
the most compelling and Islamically careful opinions in carrying
out the punishments required by God. Therefore, pregnancy
should not be considered admissible proof of the charges against
Bariya Ibrahim Magazu for zina. The court should follow the
majority opinion among the four schools of law that four witnesses
or her confession is the only means of proving this crime.
Therefore, any conviction based upon her pregnancy should
be overturned.
Even if the court adopts the minority view allowing pregnancy
as proof of zina, the proof is rebuttable by evidence that
the woman did not consent to the intercourse.
Even the minority Maliki position that allows pregnancy as
proof of zina does acknowledge the possibility that pregnancy
can result from an unwilling sexual encounter. Thus, the Maliki
school allows a woman to rebut a pregnancy-based zina prosecution
with evidence of coercion. (See Malik, al-Muwatta, Sec. 41:4,
p. 392.) This can come in the form of evidence of physical
resistance (bruises, crying out, etc.), or of immediate "sudden
response" assertions that the intercourse was coerced.
(See ash-Sharh as-Saghir, vol. 4 p. 454.)
In the case at hand, evidence of coercion exists in Bariya's
claim that she was compelled to have intercourse as payment
for her father's debt to three men. Should she be able to
prove this assertion, even the Maliki school would not allow
zina punishment. Moreover, the court should not require only
eyewitness testimonial evidence in support of a coercion defense,
because (as established above), the Maliki school admits circumstantial
evidence in hadd cases. It would be self-contradictory to
allow circumstantial evidence of pregnancy but deny circumstantial
evidence of coercion in the same case.
In the case at hand, the fact of coercion would be inherent
in any evidence indicating that Bariya was compelled to have
sexual relations as payment for her father's debt. Also, any
indications of her resistance to the men themselves would
provide further proof of coercion negating a zina conviction.
Even if the court adopts the minority view allowing pregnancy
as proof of zina and Bariya cannot prove coercion, the punishment
cannot be carried out against her if there is any element
of shubh (doubt) in the case.
All schools of Islamic law agree that the punishment for a
hadd crime is not to be carried out where there exists any
element of doubt. This is based upon the fundamental shar'i
principle that doubt suspends hadd punishments. (See Tirmidhi
hadith "idra'u al hududa bi' shubha" ("drop
the hadd punishments in cases of doubt"), "al-hudud
tusqat bil shubha" ("hadd punishments are suspended
in doubtful cases"), Ibn Rushd, Bidayat al-Mujtahid,
Vol. 6, p. 113.) Examples of doubt in zina cases include (as
mentioned above) evidence that the defendant was asleep, or
mistaken about her or his marital status with the other party,
or that she or he was coerced. Ibn Farhun holds that evidence
of foreplay (by which semen might have been ejaculated even
without intercourse) creates doubt. Abu Hanifa has stated
that where there is any financial arrangement connected to
the act of intercourse, it is doubtful as zina, (see ash-Sharh
as-Saghir, Vol. 4, p. 448) as is arranging for someone to
have sex with your slave (see Bidayat al-Mujtahid, Vol. 6,
p. 113) -- an example somewhat comparable to Bariya's claim
that her intercourse was arranged by her father.
Moreover, Islamic jurisprudence also strongly discourages
hadd punishment where there is anything mitigating against
it ("yurahat takfif"), such as the health of the
defendant, or their family's dependence upon them. (See Tirmidhi
hadith "Avoid punishments so long as there is room for
avoiding them," "Keep the Muslims away from punishments
wherever possible. If there is any way out for an offender
to escape punishment, acquit him. It is better for a judge
to err in acquittal than in conviction.") In this case,
there are several mitigating factors: Bariya is very young
and apparently a victim of serious adversity and possible
abuse by her father and society, and she presumably has no
previous deviant record Thus, even if she is not able to prove
coercion, there is surely enough mitigating evidence to suspend
the zina hadd punishment against her.
To be enforceable by the state, a hadd crime must be part
of a fully-formed shari'a legal system; if shari'a is applied
piecemeal then the state perpetuates injustice in the name
of Islam.
The crime of zina is only one of many hadd crimes specified
in the shari'a, and a very small part of Islamic jurisprudence
as a whole. Each element of the law articulated by the classical
Islamic scholars is done with this in mind, such that many
elements rely upon the existence of other parts of the whole.
For example, Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab established that the
hadd punishment for theft would be suspended where the state
had not fulfilled its Islamic obligation of public welfare
in a time of famine. This principle applies also to a failure
by the state to respond to all potential hadd criminal activity.
For example, rape is established under the hadd of hiraba
by classical Islamic jurists. (See Quraishi, Her Honour, p.
20), but modern enactments of shari'a today rarely include
the hiraba of rape among their criminal codes. In this case,
the prosecution of Bariya for zina is unjust if there is no
simultaneous avenue for her to legitimately assert a shar'i
rape charge. (Moreover, any failure by her to complain of
the rape immediately after the event would be perfectly understandable
in such a situation, and should not be used against her as
evidence that the intercourse must have in fact been consensual.)
In conclusion, the zina punishment should not be carried out
against Bariya Ibrahim Magazu. Her conviction cannot stand
only upon the fact of her unmarried pregnancy and even if
this evidence is admissible, it is rebutted by her evidence
that the intercourse was coerced. Finally, the court should
be especially reluctant to carry out a zina punishment against
Bariya in light of all the mitigating evidence in this case.
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