Much of northern India has been gripped by a deadly heatwave with temperatures above 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit), killing scores of people by heatstroke.
"Every Muslim must ensure no green trees and crops are set on fire," Khalid Rasheed Farangi Mahal, chair of the Islamic Centre of India, told AFP.
Mahal, a top scholar in the northern city of Lucknow, issued the non-binding fatwa or ruling on Sunday, saying that the religious duty of Muslims to conserve greenery and water was "stated in the Koran".
"Burning trees and crops is forbidden in Islam and is considered a grave sin," read the fatwa, published in Urdu and Hindi.
He also urged Islamic clerics to encourage stewardship of the environment during their sermons -- telling people to take care of the trees around them.
"Instead of merely planting a sapling symbolically, it is more meaningful to take care of existing plants and trees," he said, urging Muslims to prevent pollution of waterways and the sea.
Last week, an Indian court urged the government to declare a national emergency over the country's ongoing heatwave, saying that hundreds of people had died during weeks of extreme weather.
The High Court in the western state of Rajasthan, which has suffered some of the hottest weather, said authorities had failed to take appropriate steps to protect the public from the heat.
India is no stranger to searing summer temperatures but years of scientific research have found climate change is causing heatwaves to become longer, more frequent and more intense.
Researchers say human-induced climate change has driven the devastating heat impact in India and should be taken as a warning.
Indonesia law giving religious groups mining permits sparks outrage
Jakarta (AFP) June 3, 2024 -
A new law allowing the Indonesian government to grant permits to religious organisations to operate mines has outraged environmentalists in the world's leading nickel producer.
Outgoing President Joko Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, signed a decree on Thursday, opening the path for religious groups to manage concessions to "improve social welfare".
But a leading Indonesian environmental watchdog, Mining Advocacy Network (JATAM) slammed the regulation as the government's attempt to keep and control natural resources for the benefit of elites.
"We saw this as a transaction between Jokowi and religious groups," JATAM's national coordinator Melky Nahar told AFP Monday. "We read this as a gratitude from Jokowi to religious groups for supporting him during his two terms".
"There's also a possibility that Jokowi is trying to maintain political influence... even after his term has ends," he said.
The presidential spokesman did not immediately respond to AFP when contacted for comment.
Indonesia has vast mining resources spread over its thousands of islands, with nickel as one of the main minerals.
It has the world's largest nickel reserves at roughly 21 million tonnes, accounting for over a fifth of the global total.
Nickel is a crucial component in batteries used for electric vehicles.
Indonesia's largest Muslim organisation, Nahdlatul Ulama, which has more than 95 million members, said it was up for the task.
"Nahdlatul Ulama is ready with our skilled human resources, complete organisation structure, and strong business network," its chairman, Yahya Cholil Staquf said Monday in a post on their website.
But Nahar said religious groups were not suitable entities to operate mines.
"Mining is a fragile economic model,... It needs a lot of capital and technology," he said.
"If these religious groups are serious about improving their members' welfare, why not join sustainable business?"
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