MUMBAI — Islam can be
the road to significantly curb the number of victims of the deadly habit of
smoking, attendants of the world’s largest conference on tobacco control were
told.
"Islam is a
powerful tool," Lath Yahya Ibrahim Mula Hussain, an Iraqi oncologist, told
Indo-Asian news Service (IANS) on Thursday, March 12, on the sidelines of the
World Conference on Tobacco OR Health (WCTOH) in Mumbai.
Hussain told the
five-day annual event that Islam can be used to curb tobacco consumption across
the world, given that Muslim smokers make up a significant majority of the
smoking population.
"It is a hard
fact that most Muslims have fallen prey to tobacco," he said.
"Islam can be
used as an effective tool for tobacco control among Muslims, who constitute 22
percent of the world’s population."
Smoking is embedded
in the culture of many Muslim countries.
In Indonesia, the
world most populous Muslim country and the world’s 5th largest cigarette
market, over a third of the 230 million people smoke, according to the World
Health Organization (WHO).
In Muslim-majority
Malaysia 21.5 percent of the adult population smoked in 2006, according to the
Third National Health and Morbidity Survey.
An estimated 35 to 40
percent of Saudis above 15 smoke while in Egypt nearly 60 percent of men smoke.
Scholars
The Iraqi oncologist
believes that the teachings of the Noble Qur`an can be used to curb smoking
addiction.
"Islam…can be
used to guide the lives of Muslims across the globe but it ought tobe used
effectively."
Hussain says Muslim
scholars as the main weapon in this battle.
"I believe that
we can make a beginning by using those scholars who think tobacco should be
banned."
Though there is no
direct mention of banning smoking in the Qur’an, a habit that was not spread
during the early days of Islam, most scholars deem it haram (prohibited).
They rely on a hadith
by Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) saying that Muslims must
abstain from anything harmful.
Smoking- related
diseases kill six million people each year and drain $500 billion from global
economy each year, according to the latest edition of "Tobacco Atlas"
issued by the WCTOH.
Tobacco use will kill
1 billion people worldwide in the 21st century if current smoking trends
continue, WHO warns.
Hussain wants to
arrange awareness programs for scholars so that they can help convince more
Muslims to quit the deadly habit.
Scholars in many
parts of the world have already taken on smoking.
In 2006, Lebanon’s
top Shiite scholar Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Fadlallah
issued a fatwa
ordering his followers to stop smoking.
Saudi scholars have
supported a major crackdown on smoking in the holy city of Makkah.
Last January, about
700 scholars of Indonesia Ulemas Council (MUI) banned smoking in public places
and for children and pregnant women.
But they stopped
short of issuing an all-out ban on smoking.
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