The House of Representatives (DPR) passed the Bill on Syariah Banking on Tuesday (17/06/08). This is the culmination of considerable effort to ensure that Indonesia is in a position to capitalize on the expanding global demand for Syariah based banking and financial services and products. The Minister of Religion, Maftuh Basyuni, has stated that the new law was necessary to accommodate changes in the banking sector as those changes relate specifically to Syariah banking. It is clear to the Minister that this is a sector that is growing rapidly and a sector that Indonesia can quickly develop expertise in.
Previously Syariah banking was regulated under the Banking Law, Law No. 7 of 1992 as amended by Law No. 10 of 1998, and it was becoming increasingly evident that the provisions contained in the Banking Law were not suitable in terms of regulating the needs of a vibrant Syariah based banking sector.
Conventional banks, banks that other banking services other than Syariah based ones will have to establish Syariah Business Units (Unit Usaha Syariah / UUS) and ensure that these units are separate from their other banking activities. It is expected that Syariah based banks will not only offer Syariah based variants of traditional banking products but will also offer other Syariah based fund managing alternatives.
Generally, Bank Indonesia will play the primary supervision role. However, the new law calls for the establishment of a Syariah Supervisory Board (Dewan Pengawas Syariah / DPS). The DPS will include a role for the Indonesian Ulemas Council (Majelis Ulama Indonesia / MUI). The MUI is expected to provide advice on the validity of any Syariah based banking product.
Interestingly, the Religious Courts are given primary responsibility for resolving disputes. This is interesting in the sense that the Religious Courts have traditionally dealt with Islamic family law matters. Therefore, to ensure that litigants have confidence in the court’s ability to handle what are likely to be complex financial transactions and issues it is expected that the court will see the appointment of specialized expertise in this area. Nevertheless, it must be noted that the new law permits alternative dispute resolution to take place and it does not absolutely absolve the general courts from the dispute resolution process.
Bank Indonesia is responsible for drafting and enacting implementing regulations in order to give effect to many of the provisions.
24 August 2008
Syariah Banking
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