#BBCtrending: Why some Arabs are rejecting strict interpretations of Sharia
http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-30181494
Dr Alyaa Gad, an Egyptian doctor living in Switzerland, started the hashtag. "I have nothing against religion," she tells BBC Trending, but says she is against "using it as a political system". Islamists often call for legal systems to be reformed to be consistent with Sharia principles, and some want harsh interpretations of criminal punishments to be implemented. Dr Gad says she is worried about young people adopting the extremes of this kind of thinking. "You see it everywhere now, Islamic State is spreading mentally as well as physically" she told BBC Trending.
One of Dr Gad's tweets compared what action is taken against those who commit crimes under strict interpretations of Sharia to those who do so in Western societies.
The Tweet says: "A thief under Sharia
rule has his hand cut off and becomes a burden on society - and a
Norwegian criminal is rehabilitated to become a good citizen"
The caption for this cartoon reads:
"Marrying four [women] and underage girls and slaves is moral. But a
consensual relationship between two unmarried people is immoral and
against Islam".Others found the hashtag to be offensive to Muslims. Dr Gad, who started it, was called a "non-believer". Another commented: "You don't want Sharia because you want homosexuality, alcohol and adultery."
Dr Gad, who has a popular YouTube channel that discusses sexuality and health issues, says she is used to this kind of reaction to the topics she initiates. She says one of the reasons she started the hashtag is because she values her right to speak out - a right she says her friends back in Egypt don't have in the same way. "If I were living in Egypt I would not be half as courageous as I am now," she says.
Reporting by Mai Noman

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