Saturday, 6 December 2014

The Kingdom of Bahrain to develop central Sharia board for Islamic banks

The Kingdom of Bahrain to develop central Sharia board for Islamic banks

 

[caption id="attachment_20782" align="alignnone" width="400"]5559c2d6-c95b-48ed-af03-11377a6ea511_16x9_600x338 (Sharia boards are groups of scholars who rule on whether financial instruments follow religious principles. (Shutterstock))[/caption]

 

The Kingdom of Bahrain central bank is setting up a central sharia board to help oversee Islamic finance products in the Kingdom of Bahrain and will introduce new rules to strengthen governance in the sector, central bank Governor Rasheed al-Maraj said.

 

Traditionally, Islamic banks have practiced self regulation to ensure the sharia-compliance of their products, but a centralized model is increasingly being favored across the global industry.

 

Sharia boards are groups of scholars who rule on whether financial instruments follow religious principles, such as bans on interest payments and pure monetary speculation.

 

The central bank will introduce new sharia governance rules to expand the internal sharia review and audit functions, while making it mandatory for banks to have an independent external sharia audit.

 

“Good Governance is a pervasive theme of our times and for Islamic banks its importance cannot be over-emphasized,” Governor Rasheed al-Maraj said at an industry conference in the capital Manama on Tuesday.

 

The Kingdom of Bahrain central bank already has a sharia board but its scope is limited to vetting its own products, while a country-level sharia board would help limit product discrepancies, speed the design of new products and boost investor confidence.

 

“A central sharia board is also being established to help the industry achieve consistency in sharia opinions and set the direction of product innovation,” Governor Rasheed al-Maraj said, without giving a time frame.

 

Last month, Indonesia’s capital market regulator signed an agreement with the country’s national sharia board to strengthen oversight of the Islamic finance industry.

 

In October, State of Oman central bank set up a sharia supervisory board to help oversee the sultanate’s Islamic banking industry.

 

The United Arab Emirates has also said it plans to follow a centralized approach, backed by specific legislation, although it has not given a timetable for such plans.

 

(Reuters)

 

(Al Arabiya News, 3 Wednesday December 2014 The Roman)

 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.