NAIROBI -- For 13 years, Judge Mudhar Ahmed has worked in relative
obscurity, issuing Muslim marriage certificates, divorcing Muslim
couples and weighing in on Muslim inheritance disputes. Now, he's facing
an issue unlike any he has seen. He has one word to describe it:
"Islamophobia."
Ahmed is the head of Nairobi's Kadhis Court, one of 17 judicial bodies
that administer sharia, or Islamic law, to Kenya's Muslim minority. The
courts were enshrined in the nation's constitution decades ago, but
Christian leaders are seeking to remove them from a proposed new
constitution, scheduled for a referendum Aug. 4. They argue that Kenya
is a secular state and that Muslims should not receive special
privileges.
Read the complete story(Some news sites require registration)