Maybe we need to read this again . 
It was all over the web lately, but it was like an ordinary topic and didn't get its share of the important  cover. Known but unknown. 
This one is from Time.com
This may be the fatwa the world has been waiting for. It was delivered, not  in a mosque or a madrasah, nor in some dark corner of cyberspace, but in a  wood-paneled hall opposite St. James' Park in London last week. Though issued  just across the street from Britain's Foreign Office, its author, Shaikh  Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri, stressed that neither he nor Minhaj ul-Quran, his  Pakistan-based organization, was supported in any way by any government. His  voice and finger often rising sternly, the sheik delivered a far-reaching  diatribe against terrorists and what he described as their wrongheaded concept  of jihad. His fatwa: Terrorism is at all times, in all conditions, against  Islam. The murders terrorists commit will send them, not to paradise, as often  claimed, but to hell. "[Terrorists] are the heroes of hellfire," he thundered.  Their actions are not just unlawful but render terrorists kufr, or  disbelievers, casting them outside the Islamic faith. 
Thousands of clerics have spoken out against  terror since 9/11, but Qadri, a highly respected, Pakistan-born scholar with  hundreds of books to his name and millions of followers everywhere from Syria to  Fiji, has issued a fatwa that just might have traction. Quilliam, the U.K.-based  antiextremist think tank, declared it a "highly significant step towards  eradicating Islamist terrorism." The following day, as TIME was wrapping up an  interview with Qadri, President Hamid Karzai's office was on the phone from  Kabul, asking for the rights to translate the fatwa into Dari and Pushtu.  
At 600 pages, Qadri's fatwa may well be the most detailed antiterror fatwa  ever written, but it's far from the first. Since 9/11, clerics from Iran's  Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to al-Jazeera's televangelist Sheik Yusuf  al-Qaradawi have condemned terrorism. In 2008, 6,000 Indian Muslim clerics  endorsed an antiterror fatwa. Qadri himself was among the 170 Islamic scholars  from various sects who signed an antiterrorist fatwa in Amman in 2005. 
But none of these fatwas has stopped terror. The  Amman fatwa was delivered a day before four British suicide bombers killed 52  people on London transport. Too often, fatwas lose their force because they're  delivered by establishment scholars, who are seen as protecting the regimes they  serve. Fear blunts fatwas, too: last year, Sarfraz Hussain Naeemi, a prominent  Pakistani cleric and an outspoken critic of Taliban violence, was killed by a  suicide bomber soon after he'd issued an antiterror statement on Pakistani TV.  Fearful of retributions, clerics frequently pad their antiterror fatwas with  exceptions, says Qadri, or — more sinisterly — with ambiguous language. "Many  clerics were condemning, but they are scared, so they condemn in a very soft  way, with ifs, and buts," he says. "To save themselves from the  terrorists, they speak in a conditional and doublespeak way." 
After 9/11, al-Jazeera's Qaradawi made a distinction between al-Qaeda bombers  — whom he condemned — and the jihad of the Palestinians, which he deemed  legitimate. The Grand Sheik of Al-Azhar, Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, has seemed to  flip-flop on whether Palestinian suicide bombing is terrorism, or legitimate  martyrdom. Qadri's fatwa, by contrast, makes no exceptions. "This is an  absolute, unconditional, unqualified condemnation of terrorism, without any kind  of exception or excuse," he declaimed at its launch. "No context, no discussion  of foreign policy of a certain country, no occupation ... can create a pretext  for the people to take up arms." The solution, says Qadri, is not violence, but  democratic dissent, achieved through political channels, petitions, lawful  activism and peaceful protest. 
The fatwa's blanket nature worries some. "It has  intelligent, noble ideas that I accept and subscribe to totally," says Fuad  Nahdi, a British Muslim community-affairs analyst. "But it doesn't acknowledge  the issues on the ground, where people are frustrated by Western alliances to  corrupt governments. Talk to a villager in Pakistan or Afghanistan, and tell  them to petition their government or resort to peaceful protest, and they'll  tell you that the only sign of government they've seen is the drones dropping  bombs on them." 
But it's precisely the swelling support he saw for terrorism in  Pakistan that spurred Qadri to start work on the fatwa four months ago. He'd  been writing books condemning terrorism since 2002, but it wasn't until last  year, he says, when Pakistani public opinion began turning against its own  military and against the coalition forces in Afghanistan that he set to work on  a formal religious opinion. Where some clerics dispense fatwas the way  politicians dispense press releases, this is only the second of 59-year-old  Qadri's career. "I don't normally indulge in fatwa matters," he told TIME.  "Because of my status, people accept them as binding." If that happens this time  then the consequences could be far-reaching. 
End of the article .
Can this fatwa do that ? 
I think I read about this as well and, like you say, nothing much seemed to happen. What's his standing as a cleric?
BalasHapusdad, he is very famous one indeed but mostly in Pakistan.
BalasHapusAnd unfortanetly most of these skeiks are attacked for issuing such fatwas, seems like the trends are not with it or that the voice heard loudly is the extermists one.