South Africa Allows Imams To Legally Officiate Weddings For The First Time

South Africa Allows Imams To Legally Officiate Weddings For The First Time
LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 03: The Deputy President of the Republic of South Africa, His Excellency Kgalema Motlanthe arrives for a National Service of Thanksgiving to celebrate the life of Nelson Mandela at Westminster Abbey on March 3, 2014 in London, England. (Photo by Chris Jackson/Getty Images)
LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 03: The Deputy President of the Republic of South Africa, His Excellency Kgalema Motlanthe arrives for a National Service of Thanksgiving to celebrate the life of Nelson Mandela at Westminster Abbey on March 3, 2014 in London, England. (Photo by Chris Jackson/Getty Images)

South Africa on Wednesday accredited over 100 imams as marriage officers, allowing the Muslim clerics to officiate at fully recognized weddings for the first time.

Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe hailed "a new chapter in the story of the Muslim community in South Africa".

"This will enable the legal official recognition of the unions of Muslim couples," he said at a ceremony in Cape Town.

Imams had previously presided over weddings that were not fully recognized in civil law.

Motlanthe said Muslim couples would now have the "protective instruments" of the secular state, while maintaining "Koranic values"

Cape Town-based legal aid group, the Women's Legal Centre, welcomed the registration of the clergy as a "step in the right direction."

But a grouping of over 200 Muslim organizations in southern Africa, the Islamic Unity Convention claimed the broader Muslim community in the country was not consulted on the government's decision to certify the Imams.

"It is suspiciously expedient that the government has also taken this step to apparently recognize Muslim marriages a week before an election, when it had dragged its feet on the issue for the past 20 years," said the groups' spokeswoman Magboeba Davids.

Muslims in South Africa account for just under two percent of the 52.9 million population.

Copyright (2014) AFP. All rights reserved.

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