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Question: Is there any difference
between a Muslim and a non-Muslim in the matter of prohibition of Riba#?
Can the prohibition of Riba# be extended
to the loans obtained from non-Muslims, or for that matter, from Muslim
foreign countries whose laws and national policies, together with international
monetary laws and policies, are not within the control of the State of
Pakistan?
Answer: There is no difference between a Muslim and a non-Muslim in the matter of prohibition of Riba#. But there is a difference in the one who charges Riba# on the loan he gives and the one who gives Riba# on the loan he receives. Essentially, it is taking Riba#, rather than giving it, that has been prohibited and condemned in the Qur’a#n (for example, 2:275-280; 3:130 & 30:39). In none of the related verses, the borrower has been condemned. In fact, the Qur’a#n strongly urges the lender to deal leniently with the borrower who is in straitened circumstances. When the borrower has no reasonable excuse to borrow on Riba# and he does that deliberately, merely to get an edge, even he is guilty of co-operating in an evil.* It follows from the points made above that:
b) The government should gradually try to bring the country out of the situation where it has to borrow on Riba#, or even borrow for that matter. c) The government should also try to reform the society and its institutions to such an extent that no reasonable excuse is left for any one to borrow on Riba#. d) Charging or taking Riba#, whether from a Muslim or a non-Muslim, cannot be allowed in any case. |
*. The following statement
attributed to the Prophet (sws) should also be understood in the light
of the same principle, that is in the absence of a reasonable excuse even
the borrower and all others who are involved in a Riba#
bearing transaction are guilty of co-operating in evil, which is something
the Qur’a#n has stopped the
believers from doing (5:2):
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