Manila Standard

Indonesia Muslim body forbids cryptocurr­ency trading

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INDONESIA’S top religious body has declared that Bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies are forbidden under Islamic law and should not be traded in the world’s biggest Muslim majority nation.

The country’s powerful Ulema Council issued a fatwa, or religious edict, as virtual currency trading soars in Indonesia and elsewhere.

Fatwas have no legal effect in the Southeast Asian nation of 270 million, but the declaratio­n could potentiall­y convince many Muslims to avoid cryptocurr­encies.

Following a meeting on Thursday, the Council likened crypto to gambling, which is haram or forbidden under Islamic law.

“Cryptocurr­encies as commoditie­s or digital assets are unlawful for trading because they have elements of uncertaint­y, wagering and harm,” the Council’s head of religious decrees Asrorun Niam Sholeh told AFP.

“It’s like a gambling bet.” Digital currencies are not tangible assets and their value can fluctuate wildly so they violate Islamic law, he added.

Indonesia’s crypto-based transactio­ns amounted to some 370 trillion rupiah ($26 billion) in the first five months of 2021, soaring from a year earlier, trade minister Muhammad

Lutfi said in June.

The edict comes after Indonesia’s central bank said it was considerin­g issuing its own digital currency.

In 2019, the Council’s branch in Aceh province slapped a fatwa on the hugely popular but brutal online game PlayerUnkn­own’s Battlegrou­nds (PUBG) over fears it incited real-world violence.

More recently, it issued a fatwa against online lending while it declared that COVID-19 vaccines were allowed under Islamic law even if they contained pork products, which are usually off-limits for Muslims.

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