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No legal system in the world has aroused as much interest as Sharia. In 1990, Pakistanthe world’s second most populous Muslim-majority nation enacted an Islamic law of murder that effectively privatized punishment by giving the heirs of murder victims the right to retaliate against offenders (qisas) and by permitting killers to pay blood money (diyat) to those heirs as a means of settling their case and avoiding or reducing the criminal sanction. This article analyzes Tahir Wasti’s recent monograph in order to describe how this Islamic criminal law was made and how it has been interpreted and applied, and in order to explore how and why “Sharia in practice” has delivered neither justice nor security in the Pakistan context. In the end, Pakistan’s law of murder may be a case of what Murray Edelman called “words that succeed and policies that fail.”

David T. Johnson. (2010) Murder and Punishment in Pakistan, Pakistan Journal of Criminology, Volume-02, Issue-1.
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