Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

Egyptian Preacher Says Men Can Have Sex With Dead Wives ... Gets Banned From TV

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Sep, 2017 12:39 PM
    Controversial cleric Sabri Abdel Raouf cannot go on television or radio, Egypt's top media watchdog ruled on Tuesday, after he said that Muslims could have sex with their wives' corpses, Al-Arabiya Arabic news channel reported on Tuesday.
     
    The Supreme Council for Media Regulation decision bans Raouf - a professor at Cairo's prestigious Al-Azhar university - from appearing on private or public satellite channels or to be hosted on radio stations.
     
    Raouf's fatwa insults Islam and disrespects the sanctity of the dead, said the council's director Makram Mohammed Ahmed, quoted by Al-Arabiya.
     
    The council has also banned TV programmes from discussing such issues and will appeal to the Al-Azhar - the leading authority on Sunni Islam - to investigate Raouf, Al-Arabiya quoted Ahmed as stating.
     
     
    Raouf, known as Sheikh Sabri, denied issuing the fatwa, saying his comments during an interview with Egypt's private LTC channel on Sunday have been misrepresented.
     
    In the TV interview, Raouf reportedly said that Islam does not consider sexual intercourse between a man and a dead woman as a ‘sin' as long as the dead woman was his wife.
     
    Although Raouf also reportedly said necrophilia was not a practice that society could easily accept or one in which a rational person would engage, his comments sparked outrage in Egypt.
     
    Raouf was vilified on social media with users calling on the Egyptian government promptly put the preacher on trial.
     

    MORE International ARTICLES

    India-Born Academician Anantha Chandrakasan Named Dean Of MIT's Engineering School

    India-Born Academician Anantha Chandrakasan Named Dean Of MIT's Engineering School
    Anantha Chandrakasan, the Vannevar Bush Professor and head of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) was last month named the dean of the MIT's School of Engineering.

    India-Born Academician Anantha Chandrakasan Named Dean Of MIT's Engineering School

    Talking To Yourself May Help Combat Stress

    Talking To Yourself May Help Combat Stress
    Talking to yourself in the third person during stressful events may help control emotions without any added mental effort, a study has found.

    Talking To Yourself May Help Combat Stress

    US Urges Nuke Club NSG Members To Support India's Application

    US Urges Nuke Club NSG Members To Support India's Application
    India has applied for the membership of the 48-member Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) which controls the nuclear trade.

    US Urges Nuke Club NSG Members To Support India's Application

    Nawaz Sharif Steps Down As PM After SC's Disqualification Verdict, Brother Sharif To Succeed

    Nawaz Sharif Steps Down As PM After SC's Disqualification Verdict, Brother Sharif To Succeed
    A five-judge bench unanimously disqualified Nawaz Sharif from his post after an investigative panel linked his grown up children to offshore companies, showing that their wealth was far above their legitimate earnings.

    Nawaz Sharif Steps Down As PM After SC's Disqualification Verdict, Brother Sharif To Succeed

    Pervez Musharraf Contemplated Nuking India in 2002, Chickened Out Fearing Retaliation

    Former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf has said he considered using nuclear weapons against India after a terror attack on the Indian Parliament in 2001 dramatically peaked India-Pakistan tensions.

    Pervez Musharraf Contemplated Nuking India in 2002, Chickened Out Fearing Retaliation

    'Allow Women To Sing Shabad At Golden Temple', Say Sikh-Americans

    'Allow Women To Sing Shabad At Golden Temple', Say Sikh-Americans
    About 120 young Sikhs between the age group of seven and 17 from across the United States and Canada, gathered in a Maryland suburb of Washington, aised the question of why Sikh women are not performing kirtan at Darbar Sahib

    'Allow Women To Sing Shabad At Golden Temple', Say Sikh-Americans