Home
Tuesday, 28 August 2012 16:58

No place for sharia law in Australia - Sir Gerard Brennan

SirGerrardBrennan_UNSW_3Former High Court Judge Sir Gerard Brennan has said that sharia law poses problems for Australia and that Australia cannot have TWO legal systems.

He made the statements in a recent lecture "in honour of the former law professor Hal Wootten at the University of NSW." The lecture was titled "Lessons from a life in the Law".
Sir Gerard was Chief Justice of the Australian High Court from 1995 to 1998 (source).  

The report from the Newsroom at the UNSW appears first, followed by links to other articles.

Read the full speech here (on the UNSW website). [Photo from UNSW article.]


Lessons from a life in the law

UNSW Newsroom, 24 August 2012.

Former High Court chief justice Gerard Brennan has delivered UNSW Law's annual Hal Wootten lecture, touching on issues from sharia law to the importance of the jury.

In a wide-ranging speech Lessons from a Life in the Law, Sir Gerard warned that there was no room in Australia to introduce sharia law as a parallel legal system, arguing the idea was "misconceived".

He said any move to create legal "pluralism" could undermine the cohesiveness of Australia's multicultural society.

''There have been some suggestions that, following the growth of Islam in Australia, there is room for a pluralistic legal system, a system in which at least some parts of Islamic sharia law might operate as part of Australian law and in parallel with the common law system . . . that suggestion seems to me to be misconceived,'' Sir Gerard said.

"A Muslim is free to adhere to the beliefs, customs and practices prescribed by sharia law insofar as they are consistent with the general law in force in this country," he said. However, "no court could apply and no government could administer two parallel systems of law, especially if they reflect, as they inevitably would reflect, different fundamental standards".

Sir Gerard also defended the role of the jury in the modern legal system.

"The collective wisdom of twelve jurors and the innate sense of fairness in our people is a solid bastion against injustice.  After some experience in criminal cases, I recall only one instance of a jury whose verdict I suspected.

"To be sure, there can be miscarriages of justice but, when it comes to the determination of the ultimate issues in a trial, the wisdom born of the various life experiences of twelve jurors is likely to be greater than the wisdom of a single judge, however experienced and learned the judge may be," Sir Gerard said.

Read the full speech here.

Read coverage of the speech in The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian [subscription] and The Australian Financial Review [subscription].

Other media reports:
Sharia 'undermines our multiculturalism'
by: Nicola Berkovic -From: The Australian - August 24, 2012
FORMER High Court chief justice Gerard Brennan believes there is no room in Australia for sharia law to operate in parallel with the nation's legal system, arguing that suggestions to the contrary are "misconceived".  

Brennan dismisses idea of plural legal system
Lawyers Weekly - 24 August, 2012 Leanne Mezrani 
Former High Court chief justice Sir Gerard Brennan dismissed the suggestion that Islamic Sharia law could operate in parallel with Australian law at a university lecture last night (23 August).
At the annual Hal Wootten Lecture, held at the University of NSW law school, Brennan said the idea of adopting a pluralistic legal system that recognises Sharia law is "misconceived".    

Sharia poses problems, says judge 
Sydney Morning Herald, August 24, 2012  - Geesche Jacobsen - Legal Affairs Reporter
"No court could apply and no government could administer two parallel systems of law" ... former High Court judge Sir Gerard Brennan.
THE idea sharia could operate as part of Australian law was ''misconceived'' and minority practices that offend moral standards should be abandoned, the former High Court judge Sir Gerard Brennan said last night...."