“It is against the teaching of our religion and parents do not approve of it,” said Sheik Mahad Mohamed Sheik Hassan, chairman of the regional Islamic court in Wanlawien.
The edict was the latest step to impose strict religious rule as this chaotic nation emerges from more than a decade of anarchy.
The group also has banned live music, the viewing of films and sports, and the use of qat, the leafy semi-narcotic plant, in areas it controls.
The marriage practice of “masaafo” — roughly equivalent to eloping — is common in
Mohamedek Ali, a 21-year-old Somali, said the costs were prohibitive and would prevent many marriages. “They cannot ban what our forefathers practiced,” he said. “All of us, including the mullahs were born from elopement marriage.’’
A transitional government was formed in 2004 with UN help in hopes of restoring order after years of lawlessness. But the government never asserted much authority.
Source: Mumbai Mirror
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