World | fatwa Sheik Issues Fatwa Against Terrorists Suicide bombers are hell-bound, warns Islamic scholar By Rob Quinn Posted Mar 3, 2010 2:45 AM CST Copied Sheikh Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri, a former Pakistani lawmaker, speaks at the UK launch of a fatwa which bans suicide bombing "without any excuses, any pretexts, or exceptions" in London yesterday. (AP Photo/Akira Suemori) An influential Islamic scholar has issued a sweeping and unreserved condemnation of terrorism in all its forms as un-Islamic. "Terrorism is terrorism, violence is violence and it has no place in Islamic teaching and no justification can be provided for it," Sheik Tahir ul-Qadri wrote in his 600-page fatwa ruling against terrorism. He warned that suicide bombers are not martyrs but "heroes of hellfire" whose actions can never be considered part of holy war. Qadri is far from the first Islamic scholar to condemn terrorism, but he goes further than most by declaring terrorists unbelievers instead of merely declaring terrorist acts forbidden, the Independent notes. His ruling is one of the few available both online and in English, and experts hope it may sway Western-born Muslims leaning toward extremism. An Urdu-language version will soon be issued in Pakistan, where a close friend of Qadri's was assassinated last year after issuing a similar fatwa. Read These Next Country star cancels rest of his tour: 'I am mentally unwell.' Report finds uninjured cop took an ambulance as a dying man waited. One critical island in Iran has remained unscathed in airstrikes. Second 'Doomsday Plane' in 2 months is seen over California. Report an error