KUALA LUMPUR: The new Islamic Financial Services Act (IFSA) 2012 will statutorily enforce the management of syariah non-compliance risk and require Islamic financial institutions to ensure that their aim, operation, business, affairs and activities are syariah-compliant at all times.
“This is perhaps one of the most distinctive features of the IFSA 2012,” said International Islamic Banking Liquidity Management Corp chief executive officer Prof Datuk Dr Rifaat Ahmed Abdel Karim in a statement.
The act, which is pending Royal Assent, requires that any failure to abide by this statutory requirement has to be immediately notified to the regulator and the syariah committee of the financial institution.
Furthermore, the financial institution is required to immediately cease continuing with the business or activity, which is the cause of the non-compliance, and submit a plan for the rectification of the non-compliance to the regulator within 30 days.
“This strict provision is in line with the principal regulatory objectives of the act, which aims to promote financial stability and compliance with syariah,” he said in his lecture on The Significance of Supervision and Regulation in Islamic Finance at the International Centre for Education in Islamic Finance.
The new act, which is expected to come into force this year, seeks to consolidate the Islamic Banking Act 1983 and the Takaful Act 1984.
“When it comes into force, it will be a landmark law, perhaps the only omnibus Islamic finance legislation in the world,” he added.
(The Star Online / 06 Feb 2013)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com
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