ANWAR IBRAHIM’S ISLAMIC BANKING AGENDA: RACHEL EHRENFELD
http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.8172/pub_detail.asp
Anwar Ibrahim’s Islamic Banking Agenda Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld
On her  recent visit to Malaysia, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton lauded Malaysia’s  “creative approach” to Islamic banking. She also intervened on behalf of  Malaysia’s “de-facto” opposition Islamic Party leader, Anwar Ibrahim, on trial  for sodomy and corruption. Apparently recent Wikileaks State Department released  cables with information alleging Anwar’s  careless sexual behavior, did not reach the Secretary. However, she should have  been better informed of Malaysia’s Islamic  banking agenda and Anwar’s role in promoting  it.
Islamic  banking, the Muslim Brotherhood’s invention to infiltrate and co-opt Western  economy, was slow to catch on until 1993, when Anwar Ibrahim—then Malaysia’s  finance minister—helped to introduce the newly invented “Islamic Banking windows” into conventional banks. This measure,  which familiarized clientele with and built confidence in the unknown Islamic  banking system, proved central to the development of the global Islamic finance  industry. The establishment of an independent “Islamic economy” is an important factor in the Muslim Brotherhood agenda.  Consequently, the development of Islamic banks is viewed as critical to  facilitating the establishment of a global Islamic state.
The first  successful Islamic banking experiment was the Mit Ghamr Savings Bank in Egypt,  in 1963. The Egyptian government, which  subsidized the bank, shut it down in 1968, after Muslim Brotherhood-led  demonstrations swamped the country.
Islamic  banking was introduced in Malaysia in 1963, with the establishment of Tabung  Haji (Pilgrim’s Fund), a savings institution created to help Muslims save  towards their pilgrimage to Mecca (Hajj). But the Islamization of Malaysia began  in earnest in 1981, when Mahathir Mohamad became Prime Minister. He immediately  established the Islamic Consultative Body (ICB) to oversee the implementation of  national development programs according to  Islamic values.
Mahatir’s  ambition to turn Malaysia into a “model Muslim nation” seemed to convince Anwar,  then president of the Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement (ABIM), to join the  government. Soon he became a major proponent of the Islamic Banking Act (IBA),  and the establishment of Bank Islam Malaysia Berhad (BIMB), in 1983. But the  Malaysians were slow to trust a newly invented banking system.To remedy the  situation, Anwar’s Finance Ministry issued regulations facilitating the  establishment of “Islamic Banking Windows” into the conventional Western banks  that operated in Malaysia, in 1993. This move legitimized Islamic banking and  helped the development of independent Islamic banks in Malaysia and elsewhere.
Anwar often  sprinkles his presentations with Arabic phrases from the Quran and other Islamic  books while touting the socio-political aspects of Shari’a banking. He claims  that Islamic banking and economics, based on “maqasid al-shariah,” i.e., “the  objectives of Islamic law,” could help create wealth and eradicate  poverty.
Anwar’s  talks of solving poverty and spreading justice and democracy seem to distract  his Western supporters from his commitment to replace Western political, social  and economic principles with Islamic laws. However, throughout his political  career, Anwar has openly rejected Western values while promoting Islam. In  his 1983 speech on  “Development and changing political ideas,” at the 50th Anniversary Conference  of the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Anwar criticized the  “wholesale imitation of Western values and practices” in Malaysia. These should  be replaced, he argued, with Islam, which “provides an ideological alternative  to the dominant paradigm.”
More  recently, speaking at Australian  National University, on November 15, 2010, Anwar declared:  “Democracy is … presumed [in part] to be defined by the conditions of the free  market. And this is where the founding fathers of the French Revolution with  their clarion call for liberty, equality, and fraternity missed the mark … this  is because a free market is based on competition, and competition, being a  zero-sum game, has no truck with equality. On the contrary, free  markets engender inequality … Islam enjoins that while society may pursue  commerce to the fullest, justice and fairness must remain the chief criterion …  in order to establish a humane economy.” Anwar posted this speech, along with  most of his others, on his website.
Anwar’s  advocacy of “Islamic democracy,” ostensibly meant to fight for social justice  and freedom of religion, makes him popular  with Westerns desperately seeking moderate Muslim leaders. However, even a  cursory review of Anwar’s speeches on democracy and Islamic finance over the  decades show that Anwar is a committed Islamist in the mold of Sayyid  Qutb.
Yet, Anwar  is the darling “moderate Muslim” to his many admirers in the U.S. and the West.  Indeed, the list of  prominent U.S. admirers of Anwar Ibrahim, Malaysia’s former  Deputy Prime Minister, is impressive. In addition to Hillary Clinton’s  intervention on his behalf, letters of  support from Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, and former President of the  World Bank James Wolfensohn, and others, praise his leadership and fight “for  international justice, peace and development.”
Strangely,  these prominent figures fail to notice that Anwar’s fight is not for democracy,  justice and peace according to Western principles. Instead, his call is for  democratization “on the platform of Islam,” and for  replacing the competitive Western principles, with more “just” Islamic  system.
With so  much readily available information on Anwar’s advocacy of Islamic supremacy, and  his ties to sponsors of violence against the West, it is disconcerting that his  Western supporters still consider Anwar a hero, and Islamic banking a solution to Western economic  mishaps.
FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributing Editor Dr. Rachel  Ehrenfeld is the Director of the New York-based American Center for  Democracy. She is an expert on terrorism and  corruption-related topics such as terror financing and narco-terrorism. She has  helped to change New York state law, when the Libel Terrorism Protection  Act (pdf) was passed. Similar laws have been passed in other  U.S. states, and a federal law known as the SPEECH ACT which  is due to be signed, follows the same principle – that First Amendment  guarantees should protect authors and publishers against foreign libel judgments  from countries with poor free speech protections.
					
	
		
					
			
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