Salaam
How vindictive they can be.
Tariq Ramadan: Islam scholar cleared of Swiss rape charges
Renowned Islamic studies scholar Tariq Ramadan has been cleared of rape and sexual coercion by a Swiss court.
Mr Ramadan, who is a Swiss citizen, is the grandson of Hassan al-Banna, the founder of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood.
The case was brought by a Swiss woman who said she had been raped by Mr Ramadan in a Geneva hotel in 2008.
A convert to Islam, and a fan of Mr Ramadan's, the woman told the court she had been subjected to a brutal sexual assault, beatings and insults.
She said it happened after she was invited by the former Oxford academic for a coffee after a conference.
Mr Ramadan, who is 60, had faced up to three years in prison if convicted. He denied all the charges, but did admit to having met the woman.
The trial was a sharp contrast to the career so far of the man once feted as a "rock star" of Islamic thought.
As Europe struggled with terrorist attacks and rising anti-Muslim feeling, Mr Ramadan appeared as a voice of reason - condemning terrorism and opposing the death penalty. He was denied entry to Tunisia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Libya, and Syria, because, he said, he had criticised their lack of democracy.
In 2004 he was voted one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people in the world.
In 2007 he became a professor of Islamic studies at St Antony's College Oxford. He also had his critics, particularly in France, where a number of leading academics accused him of anti-Semitism.
But in 2017, Mr Ramadan's meteoric rise ended, when he was accused by a French woman of rape.
When that case became public, more women came forward.
By 2020 he was facing five charges of rape - four in France, and one in Switzerland - and had spent nine months in detention in France before being released on probation. He has consistently denied all the charges against him.
The Swiss case was the first to come to trial, and the atmosphere in the Geneva courtroom was tense.
Mr Ramadan faced a barrage of cameras as he arrived. His accuser, using the name Brigitte to protect her identity, requested a screen be put up in the courtroom so she would not have to look at the man she claimed raped her.
She described the alleged attack in detail, saying she feared she would die.
Mr Ramadan admitted inviting her to his hotel room, but denied any form of violence. He said all the accusations against him have been politically motivated and designed to discredit him.
His French and Swiss lawyers also questioned the accusers' truthfulness, citing inconsistencies around the dates of the alleged attacks.
Mr Ramadan was supported in that argument by his family. His son Sami, pointing to his father's "role in the debate about Islam in France," told the BBC in 2019 that the cases against his father were "motivated by other reasons, which we feel are political."
That view was backed by dozens of high-profile figures, including American philosopher Noam Chomsky, and British filmmaker Ken Loach, who signed an open letter questioning whether Mr Ramadan was receiving a fair legal process, with the usual presumption of innocence.
In court in Geneva, the prosecution insisted Brigitte could not have invented the alleged attack or have been able to tell it to the judges in such detail.
Mr Ramadan's defence lawyer insisted on his innocence, describing the charges against him as "crazy". In his own remarks to the court, Mr Ramadan asked not to be tried on his "real or supposed ideology".
After a week's deliberation, the three Swiss judges found him innocent.
While he has been cleared in Switzerland, this could be just the first of several trials.
In France, prosecutors are still assessing whether charges brought against Mr Ramadan should go to court.
He continues to protest his innocence in all the cases, and has vowed to clear his name.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-65611696
Tariq Ramadans viewpoint.
A tough but but necessary response from Bro Talha.
How vindictive they can be.
Tariq Ramadan: Islam scholar cleared of Swiss rape charges
Renowned Islamic studies scholar Tariq Ramadan has been cleared of rape and sexual coercion by a Swiss court.
Mr Ramadan, who is a Swiss citizen, is the grandson of Hassan al-Banna, the founder of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood.
The case was brought by a Swiss woman who said she had been raped by Mr Ramadan in a Geneva hotel in 2008.
A convert to Islam, and a fan of Mr Ramadan's, the woman told the court she had been subjected to a brutal sexual assault, beatings and insults.
She said it happened after she was invited by the former Oxford academic for a coffee after a conference.
Mr Ramadan, who is 60, had faced up to three years in prison if convicted. He denied all the charges, but did admit to having met the woman.
The trial was a sharp contrast to the career so far of the man once feted as a "rock star" of Islamic thought.
As Europe struggled with terrorist attacks and rising anti-Muslim feeling, Mr Ramadan appeared as a voice of reason - condemning terrorism and opposing the death penalty. He was denied entry to Tunisia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Libya, and Syria, because, he said, he had criticised their lack of democracy.
In 2004 he was voted one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people in the world.
In 2007 he became a professor of Islamic studies at St Antony's College Oxford. He also had his critics, particularly in France, where a number of leading academics accused him of anti-Semitism.
But in 2017, Mr Ramadan's meteoric rise ended, when he was accused by a French woman of rape.
When that case became public, more women came forward.
By 2020 he was facing five charges of rape - four in France, and one in Switzerland - and had spent nine months in detention in France before being released on probation. He has consistently denied all the charges against him.
The Swiss case was the first to come to trial, and the atmosphere in the Geneva courtroom was tense.
Mr Ramadan faced a barrage of cameras as he arrived. His accuser, using the name Brigitte to protect her identity, requested a screen be put up in the courtroom so she would not have to look at the man she claimed raped her.
She described the alleged attack in detail, saying she feared she would die.
Mr Ramadan admitted inviting her to his hotel room, but denied any form of violence. He said all the accusations against him have been politically motivated and designed to discredit him.
His French and Swiss lawyers also questioned the accusers' truthfulness, citing inconsistencies around the dates of the alleged attacks.
Mr Ramadan was supported in that argument by his family. His son Sami, pointing to his father's "role in the debate about Islam in France," told the BBC in 2019 that the cases against his father were "motivated by other reasons, which we feel are political."
That view was backed by dozens of high-profile figures, including American philosopher Noam Chomsky, and British filmmaker Ken Loach, who signed an open letter questioning whether Mr Ramadan was receiving a fair legal process, with the usual presumption of innocence.
In court in Geneva, the prosecution insisted Brigitte could not have invented the alleged attack or have been able to tell it to the judges in such detail.
Mr Ramadan's defence lawyer insisted on his innocence, describing the charges against him as "crazy". In his own remarks to the court, Mr Ramadan asked not to be tried on his "real or supposed ideology".
After a week's deliberation, the three Swiss judges found him innocent.
While he has been cleared in Switzerland, this could be just the first of several trials.
In France, prosecutors are still assessing whether charges brought against Mr Ramadan should go to court.
He continues to protest his innocence in all the cases, and has vowed to clear his name.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-65611696
Tariq Ramadans viewpoint.
TO MY FELLOW SISTERS AND BROTHERS IN ISLAM
May I both inform you and remind you :
1. Even though I acknowledged my own weaknesses (and I have to deal with them before God alone and my family), the cases and the objective facts show that I have never been a predator, nor was I violent, and I never admitted any "domination", let alone "violent domination", as it has been wrongly reported by French media.
2. The Swiss plaintiff, and all the French ones, "got in touch with (me)" and tried "to seduce (me)": they "were in touch with each other and were organizing (my) downfall" as the Swiss judges mentioned it in their written verdict.
3. Some sisters and brothers are taking a kind of "neutral stance" by saying they support women and sisters, potentially victims", and, at the same time, refrain from supporting a Muslim scholar and leader, who was not morally consistent and must not be idealized.
4. Indeed, Muslim scholars must not be idealized, yet this has nothing to do with the crux of the matter: the plaintiffs are not "victims" or "sisters" manipulated by a scholar: these are women with a specific political mission, who planned an encounter, were in touch with (French, Saudi, Emirati and Israeli) governements' institutions, journalists, far right activists... and asked for money !
5. May I ask my sisters and brothers, in the light of the Islamic principles to avoid any rushed moral judgements (about facts they don't know), to justify a lack of understanding, a lack of courage, or both.
6. In the West, some Islamophobes and ideological enemies know quite well the Muslims' weaknesses and inclinations, and they know how to use, at time, the very Islamic morality they despise against the Muslims they hate. And naive Muslims are quick to falling into the trap...
7. Remember ... morality is not a weapon to be used to destroy and "cancel" a sister or a brother, be her/him a scholar or a leader. Rather it is a set of principles, a path, to help our sisters and our brothers to be protected from our superficial judgments and to find release, forgiveness, resilience and peace with God.
8. Rightly used our morality is the essential means of our unity and strength ... wrongly used it is the means of our weakness and division : be your sister/brother's private educator and teacher, not her/his public judge.
May God help us,
With faith and love.
A tough but but necessary response from Bro Talha.
I'm all for defending people from wrongful allegations, especially for zina and other serious sins. I'm also against "cancel culture" as perpetuated by these online vultures who lie in wait for any opportunity to try and ruin people.
But if your key subject area is Islam, and you preach *your* reformist version of it but complete with a general morality recognisable to other Muslims, and then you end up admitting to the crime of zina in the Sharia in order to wriggle out of a secular crime of being a predatory sexual abuser, then the only thing you need to be doing is a) thanking Allah for having mercy on you and then b) withdrawing from public life for the foreseeable future.
This doesn't mean Tariq Ramadan is irredeemable - everyone sins. But the gravity of his sin, freely admitted to knowing a secular court couldn't care less about zina (in most instances), is so great as to warrant a very long time away in reflection and *no more preaching*. Perhaps he could come back and specifically warn against the evils of zina, as someone Allah put through trials and (I pray) has learned a lesson from it at some point in the future. But even that isn't for now.
What he absolutely should not be doing is saddling up again like nothing ever happened to this cowboy and it's business as usual. Have some shame.
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