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Home / Insights

Featured Insights

Islamic Finance

IsDB prize laureate on how his initiative will tackle Indonesia's waqf challenges

01 Jun 2025
Insight

Islamic Lifestyle
How AI is finding its way into regional academia  
28 May 2025
Insight

Islamic Finance
How AI is powering the future of the Islamic economy
30 Apr 2025
Insight

Opinion
Australia rekindling relationships with the Muslim World  
24 Apr 2025
Insight

Islamic Finance
Pakistan’s push for interest-free banking faces challenges
22 Apr 2025
Insight

OIC Economies
What will reconstructing besieged Gaza entail?
11 Apr 2025
Insight


All Other Insights
Islamic Finance
IsDB prize laureate on how his initiative will tackle Indonesia's waqf challenges

Medikids, a healthcare initative - co-founded by Afdhal Aliasar, an Islamic economy and finance practitioner - secured the 2025 Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) Prize for Impactful Achievement in Islamic Economics.

Medikids was awarded for its waqf initiative in Indonesia, which deploys dental clinics for families to yield sustainable funding for waqf assets and social welfare initiatives.

We speak with the IsDB prize laureate on his vision, the initiative's community engagement and scalability.  

What governance safeguards are in place to ensure Medikids' waqf assets are protected and professionally managed over the long term?

Each clinic that is designated as a waqf asset is a distinct legal entity that is administered in compliance with the government's applicable business regulations and overseen by The Waqf Agency of Indonesia. The capital of this business entity is comprised of waqf funds.

The "waqf operator" function is a professional business actor who has demonstrated their trustworthiness and ability to manage the operations of a dental clinic, which is of paramount importance in the operation of this clinic.

Image: Supplied

MHDC Group, the appointed operator waqf, has a wealth of experience administering the operations of over 30 clinics throughout Indonesia, spanning over 15 years.

Can you describe your approach to community engagement - both in sourcing waqf donations and in reaching underserved patients?

Initially, the waqf fund was primarily sourced from the founders, as well as the doctors who work in all of our clinic networks and other community members who support this program.

The funds are continuing to increase in tandem with the accelerated rise in net profit from the existing clinics. The waqf foundation has collaboration programs with numerous parties, particularly health campuses throughout Indonesia, to conduct social service activities in a variety of locations in order to distribute to the dhuafa patients in need.

We also offer dental treatment to individuals in need at our clinic locations and encourage children to visit the clinic for educational and enjoyable field excursions to learn about dental health.

Have digital tools (e-dentistry, fintech platforms, blockchain-based waqf registries etc.) played a role in scaling or de-risking your model?

The dissemination of clinical information and news has become a prevalent practice through the use of social media on the internet. We deployed digital tools in the initial stages of incorporating social crowdfunding platforms to broaden the pool of donors who wish to partake in this initiative.

We intend to issue Wakaf Sukuk with a social health theme through the Indonesia Stock Exchange in the future.

We are of the opinion that the role of digital platforms will be more significant when we offer social investments through trusted channels that are indeed based on the performance of social activities that have been running well and continue to develop.

Of course, we place a high value on the trust of the waqf, which is motivated by the desire to achieve results that have a positive and sustainable impact on society and the community.

In what ways could your model be replicated or franchised in other Muslim-majority contexts with varying healthcare infrastructures?

It is highly probable that this program will be further developed in numerous locations worldwide, particularly in other Muslim countries, in accordance with the concept of waqf. The demand for high-quality healthcare services is significantly increased in accordance with the economic development of society.

The key to success will be the concept of a productive and independent waqf that can finance the operations of the waqf assets themselves.

We are highly amenable to the prospect of forming partnerships with other organizations in order to establish a sustainable and productive social movement.

 

01 Jun 2025
Insight
Islamic Lifestyle
How AI is finding its way into regional academia  

Artificial intelligence has seized popular imagination like no technology in recent memory. From smart translators and virtual assistants to content generations tools and chatbots – AI in its varying forms and applications has taken centre stage. Countries and institutions are scrambling to secure the required infrastructure and the paraphernalia to capitalize on the technology and its apparent benefits. 

While AI and other frontier technologies are seeking to redefine the rules of value, this presents a real-world challenge: an asymmetry between the present education system and the tech labour market.  

AI will affect almost 40 percent of jobs around the world, according to the International Monetary Fund. This calls for a revisit of the current academic structure, in a manner consistent with the scale of transformation expected in the years ahead. Countries across the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) bloc seem to be doing just that. 

The UAE has mandated AI education to be integrated into the public-school curriculum, for children as young as kindergarten pupils up to teenagers in Grade 12. The AI curriculum will cover foundational concepts, data and algorithms, ethical awareness, real-world applications, innovation and project design, among others. 

“Mandating AI learning in schools can play a significant role in preparing students for a future where AI-related skills are expected to be in high demand,” Hameed Noor Mohamed, managing director, Alpen Capital tells Salaam Gateway.

“Beyond providing foundational knowledge of a critical technology, it also helps develop essential competencies such as analytical thinking, problem-solving, and digital literacy.” 

Neighbouring Saudi Arabia has also launched an AI high school course, targeting over 50,000 12th-grade students in its initial phase. One-fifth of internet users in the kingdom actively use various AI apps, with youth between the ages of 20 and 29 most engaged with these tools, the Saudi Internet 2024 report revealed. 

Qatar is prioritizing AI integration in the education sector with the curricula being updated with AI foundations. Bahrain, too, has plans to expand the scope of AI teaching, as detailed in the ministry’s education strategy for 2023–2026. 

“The Fourth Industrial Revolution is reaching the Gulf’s shores,” Alex Rattray, managing director – Middle East at North Highland, writes in a LinkedIn post. 

“All these forces – youth demographics, women’s empowerment, diversification, digitisation, and decarbonisation – converge into one reality: the jobs of the future GCC will require vastly different skills. A knowledge economy cannot thrive on yesterday’s skillsets.”

AI is expected to contribute $320 billion to the Middle East by 2030, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE billed as the biggest beneficiaries, according to PwC. AI is expected to contribute over $135.2 billion to the Saudi economy in 2030 - equivalent to 12.4% of its GDP. In relative terms, the UAE is expected to see the largest impact of close to 14% of 2030 GDP.  

“As GCC countries invest in AI technology, there is a need for a generation of skilled technicians to drive the industry in the region. School is the time for learning about technology, its uses and applications, its risks and challenges, but it is also a time to learn how to interact with the AI tools available to students in a way that benefits their learning and their future readiness,” Roland Hancock, Education and Skills Lead, Partner at PwC Middle East tells Salaam Gateway. 

“AI skills development needs to go further if the GCC is to make the most of its investment. Modular, practical and constantly evolving training is required to give future AI engineers the skills to be able to drive the sector. This will come at university and college level, as well as in lifelong learning.”

Overcoming challenges
Akin to all new developments and technologies, AI, especially in the world of academia, comes with its own set of obstacles. The biggest challenge facing schools, cautions Hancock, is keeping pace.

“AI is advancing so rapidly that developing and maintaining relevant educational content and training can be a moving target for schools and educators. Across the world, institutions are grappling with how to design AI programmes that stay current and accessible. The GCC is no exception.”

Sustained investment in teacher training, curriculum innovation, and public-private partnerships (PPPs), Hancock states, will be critical to ensuring educators are equipped to deliver AI education that is timely, relevant, and impactful.

According to Alpen Capital’s Mohamed, one of the primary challenges in imparting AI education is the investment required to build the necessary infrastructure and digital ecosystem. 

“The availability of reliable technology providers to upgrade existing systems and deliver effective staff training adds another layer of complexity to the cost of implementation.” 

“The GCC education sector already faces a shortage of skilled teachers. Finding tech-savvy educators who are comfortable with AI-driven tools and capable of integrating them meaningfully into the curriculum, presents an additional hurdle.” 

28 May 2025
Insight
OIC Economies
Can Indonesia’s new wealth fund lift or sink its economy?

In February 2025, Indonesia launched Danantara, a sovereign wealth fund tasked with managing $900 billion in state-owned enterprise (SOE) assets to propel economic growth.

Amid a turbulent economic landscape - marked by a weakening rupiah, a contracting equity markets space, and waning investor confidence - Danantara represents a bold bet on transforming Indonesia’s economy. 

Indonesian president Prabowo Subianto envisions it as a driver of propelling GDP growth from 5% to 8% by 2029, emulating giants like Singapore’s Temasek. Yet, public skepticism warns of governance risks and parallels to Malaysia’s 1MDB scandal. 

Potential to elevate Indonesia
Danantara’s ambitious scope - consolidating 65 SOEs, starting with seven giants like Bank Mandiri and Pertamina - offers a pathway to address Indonesia’s economic turbulence. By streamlining SOE operations, it could boost efficiency, reduce fiscal burdens, and unlock $20 billion in initial funding for high-impact sectors like infrastructure, renewable energy, and nickel downstreaming.

These investments could attract foreign direct investment (FDI), which is critical as investor confidence falters (e.g., LG Energy Solution’s $8.5 billion EV project withdrawal). 

If successful, Danantara could mirror Temasek’s role in Singapore, where state-led investments drive 5-6% annual GDP growth. For Indonesia, this could stabilize the rupiah, battered by global commodity price swings, and restore market momentum.

Beyond growth, the wealth fund could empower Indonesia to retain more economic value, addressing a longstanding issue for OIC nations often exploited by global corporations for low-value production. By investing in downstream industries like nickel processing, it could shift the country from raw material exporter to high-value producer, boosting national wealth. 

Its global advisory board, including billionaire and hedge fund manager Ray Dalio, signals intent to court international capital, positioning Indonesia as a regional economic powerhouse.

Risks that could compound challenges 
Danantara’s governance structure is a glaring concern, threatening to amplify Indonesia’s economic challenges. Unlike Temasek’s independent board, Danantara’s leadership raises fears of cronyism. National auditors (BPK, KPK) lack direct oversight, requiring House approval to probe finances. 

The appointment of Thaksin Shinawatra, Thailand’s former prime minister ousted in a 2006 coup and dogged by corruption allegations, to the advisory board further erodes credibility, calling Danantara’s integrity into question. This move risks alienating investors already wary after the Jakarta index responded negatively on the fund’s launch day.  

Weak governance could exacerbate currency volatility and capital flight, as seen in recent market trends. If Danantara bails out underperforming SOEs without reforms, it risks draining public funds - $325 trillion IDR from budget cuts is already committed. A 1MDB-like scandal, where political influence led to a $4.5 billion loss, could deepen the rupiah’s slide and deter FDI.

The Business Judgment Rule, shielding officials from liability, and optional supervisory committees heighten moral hazard, potentially turning Danantara into a political slush fund rather than an economic stabilizer.

Malaysia’s tale of triumph and tragedy
Malaysia, an OIC peer with a commodity-driven economy, offers a dual perspective on state-led investment through Khazanah Nasional Berhad and the 1MDB scandal - models of success and failure for Danantara to heed.

Khazanah, established in 1993, manages $40 billion in assets and has driven Malaysia’s economic growth (e.g., 5.6% GDP growth in 2022) by professionalizing SOE management and investing in technology and healthcare.

Unlike Danantara’s politically driven structure, Khazanah’s independent audits and professional board have attracted FDI, stabilizing Malaysia’s economy during commodity volatility. Its disciplined approach to high-return projects offers a roadmap for Danantara to boost Indonesia’s markets and rupiah. 

However, Khazanah’s early missteps, like bailing out Malaysia Airlines, warn Danantara against propping up inefficient SOEs without reforms, which could strain Indonesia’s budget amid 2025’s turbulence.

On the other hand, The 1MDB scandal, where $4.5 billion was siphoned off through corruption starting in 2009, underscores the perils of weak governance. Controlled by then-premier Najib Razak, 1MDB lacked independent oversight, leading to massive debt and a weakened ringgit. 
Thaksin Shinawatra’s advisory role in Danantara echoes 1MDB’s political entanglements, amplifying fears of elite capture.

To avoid 1MDB’s fate, Danantara must enforce rigorous audits and insulate its board from controversial figures, ensuring funds fuel growth, not enrichment.

Malaysia’s contrasting experiences highlight a clear lesson: professional governance is critical to economic success. Khazanah’s transparency offers Danantara a path to stabilize Indonesia’s economy, while 1MDB’s collapse warns of the catastrophic risks posed by political interference, which could deepen Indonesia’s currency and confidence crises.

High-stakes gamble
Danantara stands at a crossroads. If it adopts Khazanah’s professional governance and strategic focus, it could elevate Indonesia’s economy, stabilizing markets and attracting FDI to counter 2025’s turbulence. 

However, governance flaws - political leadership, Thaksin’s scandal-tainted appointment, and weak oversight - risk a 1MDB-like disaster, deepening currency woes and investor distrust. 

To succeed, Danantara needs transparent audits, a professional board free of controversial figures, and clear investment criteria, insulated from cronyism. 

As Indonesia navigates global headwinds, Danantara’s execution will determine whether it becomes a beacon of growth or a costly misstep. Policymakers must heed OIC lessons to ensure it lifts, not sinks, the nation’s prospects.
 

Rianovel Mere is a consultant and project manager at DinarStandard

06 May 2025
Insight
Islamic Finance
How AI is powering the future of the Islamic economy

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly emerging as a transformative force within the Islamic economy, driving innovation across sectors from finance and food to tourism and education. 

By enhancing Shariah compliance, improving accessibility, and enabling personalized services, the technology is reshaping how the Islamic economy operates, while preserving its ethical foundations.

More broadly, the technology’s potential economic impact is substantial - AI could contribute up to $320 billion to the Middle East's economy by 2030, according to PwC.  

“The synergy between AI and the Islamic economy is immense,” says Badr Saidi, quality manager and technical auditor at Halal Consulting S.L., a Spain-based halal certification body.  

“By leveraging AI in areas like Shariah compliance, ethical finance, halal supply chains, smart cities, tourism, and education, we can drive sustainable growth while staying true to Islamic ethical principles.”

To succeed, Saidi emphasizes the need for collaboration between AI developers, Islamic scholars, and industry leaders to ensure technological advances align with religious values.

Transforming Islamic finance

AI’s most visible impact is unfolding in Islamic finance, where it is streamlining compliance processes, improving fraud detection, and fostering financial inclusion.

“With AI, Islamic banks and financial companies can better understand their customers - how they invest, what they need, and even their risk tolerance,” says Sara Husain Hammad, innovation and technology project manager at Bahrain-based General Council for Islamic Banks and Financial Institutions (CIBAFI). 

“This helps create personalized financial products that comply with Islamic guidelines while still being innovative,” she says.

AI-powered tools are already transforming traditional processes. According to Saidi, machine learning algorithms are now automating the verification of financial transactions to ensure they adhere to Shariah law, avoiding elements such as Riba (interest), Gharar (excessive uncertainty), and prohibited investments.

He adds that AI-driven robo-advisors are also curating tailored halal investment portfolios, while predictive analytics are optimizing Sukuk (Islamic bonds) issuance and improving fraud detection in Takaful (Islamic insurance).

Banks across the Muslim world are already deploying AI. Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB) is using AI tools to assess the Shariah compliance of companies and financial instruments. Bahrain Islamic Bank has launched a digital platform offering access to more than 1,800 Shariah rulings to help simplify complex regulations and encourage industry collaboration. 

Outside of the GCC, Bank Muamalat Malaysia has partnered with Google Cloud to to deploy generative AI and advanced data analytics to help it evolve into a fully digital Islamic institution. Egypt’s Faisal Islamic Bank has embraced AI to modernize and expand its services.

AI is also helping extend financial services to underserved communities. By analyzing alternative data - such as mobile payment history and social behaviour - AI can help individuals with limited credit histories, including those in rural areas or small business owners, to qualify for financing. This supports Islamic finance’s mission of ethical and inclusive banking.

“Combined with Islamic finance’s focus on ethical and community-centered banking, AI can open doors for more people to access financial services in a way that respects their beliefs,” says CIBAFI ‘s Hammad.

Securing the halal supply chain

Beyond finance, AI is shoring up the halal economy by ensuring product traceability, authenticity, and safety. One of the biggest challenges in halal certification is verifying that ingredients and production processes comply with Islamic dietary laws. 

“AI can assist in several ways, including in ingredient label analysis. AI-powered Natural Language Processing (NLP) can scan product ingredient lists and detect potential non-halal components like gelatin, alcohol, or animal-based enzymes,” says Saidi.

AI-powered blockchain platforms now provide end-to-end tracking of halal products, from source to shelf, while computer vision systems monitor production lines for contamination, he adds. Image recognition tools are detecting fraudulent halal logos, and IoT sensors help safeguard halal-certified goods during transportation and storage.

AI is also playing a crucial role in laboratory testing. Advanced spectroscopy and chemical analysis, supported by AI, can identify traces of non-halal substances in food, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals with high accuracy. Meanwhile, AI-driven analytics are helping businesses forecast demand for halal products, ensuring better inventory management and reduced waste.

However, standardization remains a challenge. According to Saidi, differing certification criteria across countries make it difficult to create a universal AI model, and smaller enterprises may struggle with the costs of adopting these technologies.

Enhancing Muslim-friendly travel

The Muslim-friendly travel market is another area where AI is making strides. According to the State of the Global Islamic Economy Report 2023/24, AI is enabling personalized travel experiences and improving customer service with virtual assistants and predictive analytics.

“Platforms can now generate customized itineraries for Muslim travelers, factoring in prayer times, halal food, nearby mosques, and Muslim-friendly accommodations,” says Saidi.

The Saudi Tourism Authority is pioneering AI-powered services, having recently launched "Sara," a virtual tour guide offering real-time travel advice. The authority has also partnered with Visa to create a Tourism Data Lab to analyze visitor behaviour and spending trends.

Facilitating Islamic education

AI’s role in Islamic education is growing rapidly. NLP models can help scholars and students in deepening their understanding of Quranic and Hadith texts, while AI-based edtech solutions can offer personalized Islamic education and smart learning platforms for different age groups, according to Saidi.

Innovators are developing AI-powered Islamic chatbots, voice assistants, and digital Da’wah tools to facilitate knowledge sharing.

Startups are already making an impact. Pakistan’s Xeven Solutions recently launched Shahada GPT, offering Quranic translations, Hadith explanations, and halal guidance. Similarly, India-based QuranGPT answers religious queries. 

“The primary motivation behind developing QuranGPT was to bridge the gap between religion and modern individuals,” says Raihan Khan, an AI applications engineer and creator of QuranGPT. 

“Nowadays, people don’t want to spend hours flipping through books to find an answer or determine if something aligns with the teachings of the Holy Quran. QuranGPT simplifies this process by providing instant responses in natural language.”

However, combining AI with religious guidance carries significant risks. Without human oversight, AI can easily misinterpret Islamic teachings, spread misinformation, and inadvertently cause harm.

“While AI has the potential to enhance various aspects of the Islamic economy, its intersection with religion must be approached with extreme caution,” Khan warns.

“The biggest concerns lie in the inherent biases of AI models, the risk of misinformation, and the challenge of ensuring religious authenticity. Without strict monitoring, AI could do more harm than good in this space,” he adds.

Limited adoption

Despite AI's promise, adoption in the Islamic economy remains in its early stages. Most Islamic tech startups have yet to fully embrace AI, focusing instead on basic automation rather than sophisticated, AI-driven innovation.

“As of now, AI’s role in fostering innovation in the Islamic economy - particularly in tech startups or digital finance - is minimal,” says Khan. “While AI has the potential to enhance areas like Islamic banking, halal certification, and ethical investment screening, most Islamic tech startups have yet to fully explore or implement AI-driven solutions.”

30 Apr 2025
Insight
Opinion
Australia rekindling relationships with the Muslim World  

There was a palpable silence at the end of a premier screening of the documentary ‘Before 1770’ held late last year, punctuated only by distant sobs and the ruffling of tissue packets emanating from the audience of largely Muslim Australians.  

The reason why the feature documentary - showcased in multiple screenings across the country - evoked such an impassioned response was because it represented the connection Australia and its First Nations people held with the Muslim world.  

This deep connection, starting sometime in the mid-1600s, lasted for centuries until 1907 when the last ‘Perahu’ (sailing boat) from Makassar visited Arnhem land in Northern Australia. 

Dr Imran Lum (Image source: Supplied)

The reason why it resonated strongly with Muslim Australians, was because it was an untold story omitted from Australian history books; a tale intricately linking them with Australia’s First Nations people and their legacy. 

Before White colonisation, Muslim Bugis and Makassar traders would sail with the monsoon winds via the Flores and Savu seas, arriving on the shores of Northern Australia in places like the Kimberley and Arnhem Land to meet First Nations trading partners like the Yolŋu people.  

They would trade in trepang, a type of sea cucumber which was a delicacy and an aphrodisiac they would sell to lucrative Chinese markets. While their motivations for visiting Australia might have been for trepang, this was all part of wider regional trade patterns which connected Arab, Indian and Chinese markets via the Malay Archipelago.

These same Bugis seafaring traders would find themselves immersed in mercantile activity in historic port cities dotted across the Indian ocean like Aden, Muscat, and even as far as Zanzibar.  

Australia for them, was just part of an ancient maritime silk road that swapped out camels for Perahu sailing boats that covered vast distances with monsoonal winds. 

Fast forward a hundred years or so with the rise of the modern global Islamic economy, the vibrant Australian Muslim community like the Bugis before them, are rekindling historic linkages with the Muslim world through trade, halal food and Islamic finance.  

Australia is a melting point of a vibrant and dynamic Muslim population base comprising more than 70 different ethnicities. Nearly a million Muslims - more than half under the age of 25 -reside in growth areas in all the major cities and help create robust networks for business and investment opportunities.  

Halal food is now an AU$2 billion industry that helps serve the local Muslim community as well as major export markets such as Indonesia, Malaysia, the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Over 70% of Australian abattoirs are now reported to be halal certified.  

Muslim students from around the world are fostering long-lasting linkages with Australia. More than 30,000 students from Malaysia, Indonesia, and Pakistan and over 15,000 from the GCC are enrolled across universities and higher education institutes in the country. The Brunei government sends hundreds of students on scholarships to Australian universities each year. 

Education services with Muslim-majority countries amount to nearly AU$4 billion annually, generating revenue as well as creating investment opportunities across several quarters, including student accommodation, migration and employment, and halal food services. 

Lastly, Islamic finance is perhaps an untapped gold mine for Australia, having remained under the radar of Islamic investors worldwide for decades. For enterprising investors, Australia emerges as an unexpected yet compelling destination for Islamic investment. 

For select Islamic investors, Australia is not a distant continent, rather a destination that is geo-strategically situated on the fringes of vibrant Southeast Asian economies and one that offers a unique combination of a well-regulated market alongside growth opportunities for Islamic-conscious capital. 

The recently signed Australia-UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement is the first Free Trade Agreement between Australia and a Middle Eastern country, facilitating investments in local projects. Shariah-compliant real estate investment has gained ground too, with institutions such as the National Australia Bank (NAB) offering Islamic products, enabling Muslims to finance their projects.

This unique offering has facilitated numerous partnerships between Islamic investors from the GCC and Southeast Asia and the vibrant and entrepreneurial Muslim business community in Australia. 

Shariah-compliant fixed-income solutions is another area of opportunity with Australia one of the rare AAA rated countries in the world according to Moody's, S&P and Fitch. There is a slew of ASX100 companies that are investment grade and above, offering a huge opportunity for Islamic fixed-income products or Sukuk bonds. 

With ongoing tariffs and geopolitical realities, perhaps Australia is not as far away as one might believe. With its growing young and dynamic Muslim community, Australia offers a combination of economic stability, diverse investment sectors, and financial governance. Throw delicious halal food in the mix and we have a sweet spot of opportunities. 

Perhaps now is the time for Islamic investors to set their sails Down Under. 
 
Dr Imran Lum is the head of Islamic finance at a major Australian bank. He is the host of the ‘Muslim Money’ Podcast and the author of 'A Comparative Study of Riba and Islamic finance in Australia and the UK (Routledge)'.

The opinions shared here are his own and do not reflect the views of his employer
 

24 Apr 2025
Insight
Islamic Finance
Pakistan’s push for interest-free banking faces challenges

Pakistan is aiming to implement an interest-free Shariah-compliant banking system by January 2028. While the ambition reflects a momentous shift toward an Islamic values-based financial system, practitioners caution that unresolved challenges could undermine the transition.

Renewed political will
In April 2022, the Federal Shariat Court (FSC), the country’s constitutional Islamic religious court, ruled that the entire banking system must be completely free of riba – more commonly known as interest - by the end of 2027. The court instructed federal and provincial governments to amend relevant banking laws to comply with the Shariah legislation. 

The directive, however, wasn’t the FSC’s first attempt to push for a fully Islamic banking system. The religious court made an initial declaration in 1999, notes Dr Sanaullah Ansari, CEO of Al-Iqtisad Consulting, only for it to be delayed by later governments through appeals and legal reviews. 

“This process continued and finally, in April 2022, FSC ordered the government to convert the current conventional banking system by December 31, 2027,” he says. 

However, this time there is adequate political will to introduce Islamic banking, complemented by a clear roadmap accorded by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), the country’s central bank. Following the FSC’s decision, the SBP released its five-year plan (2023–2028), setting ambitious goals to transform the conventional banking sector. 

There are currently 22 banks operating in Pakistan, including six fully-fledged Islamic lenders. Many of the remaining conventional banks either operate Islamic windows or have started planning for a full conversion. United Bank Limited (UBL) and Faysal Bank have transitioned, while Bank of Khyber and National Bank of Pakistan are en route. Others like Bank of Punjab are also exploring the shift.

In parallel, the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) - the country’s financial regulatory agency - introduced the Shariah governance guidelines in January 2023.

These apply to non-banking financial companies, Takaful operators, and private pension funds, with the aim of deepening Islamic capital markets.

Sovereign debt, coordination mar outlook 
Pakistan is the second-largest Muslim-majority country in the world. However, despite strong numbers, financial inclusivity across the country is fairly tepid. The country’s sovereign debt profile is another critical factor; the IMF notes that government debt stands at 71.4% of the Southeast Asian nation’s GDP, much of which is denominated in conventional, interest-bearing instruments.

“Most of the government’s liabilities are in conventional form,” says Mohamed Damak, head of Islamic Finance at S&P Global Ratings. “The government could choose to issue only sukuks going forward to refinance all commercial debt and net new borrowings, assuming that the market appetite for these instruments will be there.”

Damak adds that a significant portion of the debt is in the form of multilateral loans, bilateral loans, and central bank swap lines, with some of the multilateral loans having very long-term tenors. “It remains to be seen if and how these can be converted or structured in a Shariah-compliant format,” he adds.

Farrukh Raza, CEO of Islamic Finance Advisory & Assurance Services (IFAAS), believes that renegotiation is likely to take time due to legal and risk concerns from creditors, as well as the complexity of restructuring existing debt. “Stakeholders need to stay focused and resolve these matters as soon as possible.” 

Despite steps taken by the SBP and SECP, several market practitioners highlight a lack of coordination between key institutions and an absence of clear, realistic timelines.

“There needs to be a more well-thought-out process with a realistic plan and determined goals,” says Raza. “There needs to be better coordination with policies and implementation among the different entities in the country.”

He outlines three critical requirements for a successful transition.

“There needs to be a political will to genuinely support this transition and all stakeholders to be aligned on making it happen,” he says. 

“Secondly, you need a well-structured roadmap with clear targets and timelines for everyone to understand and work towards. Thirdly, you need to create a national champion among state institutions to own, lead and deliver this transition.”

This lack of coordination is closely tied to insufficient communication. Public engagement has been limited, with few workshops, conferences, or awareness campaigns to educate stakeholders about what this transition entails, according to Ansari.

“While the SBP and SECP have done valuable work, the broader market is still unclear about how this transition will play out,” he says. “Without consistent messaging and cooperation between players, implementation by 2027 will be difficult.”

Changing perceptions
A significant challenge lies in public perception. Many consumers raise doubts on the veracity of the Islamic banking system, considering it a repackaged version of the conventional banking system. This lack of trust dents its uptake as well as its credibility. 

Ansari notes that many banking customers question whether there is a meaningful distinction between Islamic and conventional products. “Whilst a lot of work has been done to facilitate Islamic banking, there is still a perception that it is merely a replication of conventional banking,” he says.

Sceptics also point to challenges in countries that have adopted Islamic financial systems, including Iran, Sudan and Afghanistan, though Raza believes comparisons with those countries to be unfair. 

“It’s not fair to compare Pakistan’s transition with these countries because all of them remain challenged on the international stage,” he says. “The issues they face are political in nature and not due to their financial systems being Shariah-compliant.”

Creating goodwill through education and awareness in addition to a clear timeline and roadmap to assimilate these changes thus remains key. 

22 Apr 2025
Insight
OIC Economies
What will reconstructing besieged Gaza entail?

It may be stating the obvious but rebuilding war-torn Gaza, after 15 months of relentless bombardment by Israeli forces, will be a massive and complex undertaking, which will entail conflating several elements such as financial aid, diplomatic engagement, humanitarian relief, and long-term political efforts.

The true ask: How can Muslim-majority countries play a critical part in this intense and long-term endeavour?

Scale of destruction

The Israel-Hamas conflict has caused nearly 50,000 deaths, displaced nearly a million people, and destroyed more than 60% of Gaza's housing stock along with much of its critical infrastructure, according to a report by the RAND Corporation.

The American research institute, which advises governments and international bodies on public policy, estimates that rebuilding housing and infrastructure could take over a decade, with costs exceeding $50 billion.

Similarly, a joint report by the World Bank, the United Nations, and the European Union found that reconstructing Gaza will require around $53 billion, with the largest portion allocated to rebuilding homes. 

Short-term recovery will need approximately $20 billion over the next three years, while long-term housing reconstruction will require an estimated $15.2 billion over the next five to eight years. Immediate recovery efforts include restoring essential social services such as healthcare and education, resuming basic utilities in the energy, water, and telecom sectors, ensuring food security, and repairing partially damaged homes. 

Additionally, a massive effort will be needed to clear over 50 million tons of rubble and debris caused by 15 months of relentless Israeli bombardment.

“The devastation by Israel in Gaza demands a response that matches the scale of reconstruction efforts seen in the aftermath of World War II, when cities like Berlin and Tokyo were rebuilt whilst preserving their communities and cultural heritage,” the Muslim Council of Britain stated in February. 

Innovative reconstruction strategies

Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, a Gaza-born political analyst and resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, has proposed innovative solutions to Gaza’s immediate reconstruction challenges, including recycling its rubble to create an artificial peninsula off its central coast, which could host an airfield and a seaport. This could accord a vital, independent lifeline for the Strip’s recovery.

Additionally, Alkhatib proposes docking a floating power station offshore to supply electricity and deploying concrete breakers to process large debris. This would help clear space for temporary mobile homes, offering shelter for displaced residents as reconstruction progresses.

When it comes to providing shelter for Gaza’s displaced residents, the RAND report suggests that horizontal expansion alone cannot achieve the necessary population densities for returning communities.

Instead, the authors advocate for vertical expansion - adding floors to mid-rise buildings - as a practical solution for maximizing space in land-constrained urban areas. Additionally, vertical expansion aligns with the traditional Palestinian family structure, where generations often live in the same building, expanding upward as families grow through births and marriage, the report notes.

Muslim-countries helping rebuild Gaza

Muslim-majority countries, including Qatar, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, have previously provided billions in aid and may play a major role in funding Gaza’s infrastructure projects.

Qatar’s Gaza Reconstruction Committee has overseen hundreds of humanitarian projects since 2012. In 2024 alone, Qatar contributed over $49 million to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) to aid Gaza. Saudi Arabia has provided more than $5.3 billion in support for Palestinians across 289 projects, including $185 million since the latest escalation in 2023. Riyadh is now working with various UN agencies to raise $106 billion for reconstruction and humanitarian assistance.

Turkiye has supplied around $16.2 billion in aid to Gaza since October 2023, while the UAE's aid contributions to Gaza since the October war have been valued at $828 million. Egypt, too, has provided aid to Gaza worth nearly $196 million since the start of the war. 

Former USAID policy official Larry Garber notes that any effective reconstruction plan will require substantial resources in both personnel and funds. “Personnel might include security forces, civilian officials in formal governance roles, and technical advisers. The personnel also may have to meet a minimal vetting by Israeli authorities, depending on how they will be entering Gaza,” he said.

“Muslim-majority states should support locally-based and resilient reconstruction plans to ensure reconstruction actions respond to local needs and satisfy the ambitions of Gazan people,” says Abdalrahman Kittana, a postdoctoral research fellow at Finland’s Tampere University and an assistant professor of architectural engineering at Palestine’s Birzeit University.  

Beyond state-level support, Muslim populations - including doctors, engineers, and other specialists - can contribute by volunteering in Gaza. Kittana also suggests that offering remote job opportunities, particularly in the IT sector, and providing financial donations could further aid in the reconstruction process.

Egypt’s reconstruction plan

Egypt has already proposed a five-year $53 billion plan to rebuild Gaza, as an alternative to US President Donald Trump’s proposal to develop the enclave after depopulating it.

Endorsed by the Arab League and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), the plan envisions completing the reconstruction over the next five years. 

The proposal includes three phases, starting with the removal of rubble, construction of temporary housing, and restoration of partially damaged homes. The second phase envisions the establishment of utility networks and construction of housing units for 1.6 million people, while the third would involve completing housing for Gaza’s population, launching an industrial zone and technology hub, building fishing and commercial seaports, and developing an airport.

Egyptian businessman Hisham Talaat Moustafa, CEO of real estate developer TMG Holding, offers a more optimistic timeline. In a televised interview, he argued that Gaza’s reconstruction could be completed in three just years at a cost of $27 billion. His plan includes constructing 200,000 housing units to accommodate 1.3 million residents, with the involvement of 40 to 50 construction companies, both local and international.

Kittana believes Egypt’s proposal is impractical. While acknowledging its theoretical relevance, he argues that the plan was drafted during wartime without consulting Gaza’s local municipalities or residents, leading to critical oversights.

“The figures showing the general masterplans are out of scale architecturally and out of context practically,” Kittana explains. “The plans consider Gaza as ground zero, neglecting topographic, social, and contextual diversity as well as private ownership of the land. They deal with all of Gaza areas as if they were completely wiped out, raising questions about what they will do with undamaged or relatively sound buildings and areas.”

Furthermore, he notes that both the spatial plans and architectural typologies fail to align with Gazans’ social identity.

Kittana refers to the Gaza Phoenix Framework for the reconstruction of the strip as a more viable solution, describing it as a well-developed plan. Launched by Gaza municipalities and Palestinian grassroot communities, it encompasses fields such as urban planning, architecture, political strategies, economics, environment, and heritage.

Challenges and considerations

The success of Gaza’s reconstruction depends on multiple factors, including the stability of the three-phase ceasefire agreement and Israel’s position on material imports and border controls.

Following a renewed escalation during Ramadan last month, Egypt proposed a new ceasefire plan. 

“I don't think any country, Muslim or otherwise, has ‘committed’ any funds, which is wise on their part,” Garber says. “They should understandably wait until they can be reasonably certain that new fighting will not resume, and that the reconstruction process can proceed without impediments caused by delays in moving materials into Gaza.”

Moreover, some Muslim nations, including the UAE and Saudi Arabia, have indicated that their financial support is contingent on a clear pathway toward Palestinian statehood.

“I understand there are distinct positions even among the countries that participated in the discussions leading up to the Cairo summit,” Garber says. “My sense is that plans for trade routes should be included in the rebuilding plans, but that the initial priorities will require the restoration of essential services.”

While many Muslim-majority countries have expressed willingness to contribute, the real challenge will be sustaining long-term commitments rather than providing only short-term relief. 
 

11 Apr 2025
Insight
OIC Economies
Indonesia's tech soul is on the line

Southeast Asia’s tech landscape is bracing for a tectonic shift. Reports emerged this week that Grab Holdings Ltd., the Singapore-based ride-hailing giant, is raising capital to acquire GoTo Group, a consumer tech company and one of Indonesia’s most valuable startups. 

GoTo - born from the 2021 merger of Gojek and Tokopedia - has been a cornerstone of Indonesia’s digital economy. The GoTo ecosystem offers mobility, delivery and financial services, as well as extends e-commerce services through Tokopedia and banking solutions through its partnership with Bank Jago. 

The potential deal isn’t just a juicy headline for the daily’s business section; it’s a litmus test for the country to retain control over its technological destiny, especially after losing Tokopedia’s e-commerce arm to TikTok in early 2024 . 

At its heart lies a critical concept: platform power - the leverage a nation wields when it owns the enterprises driving its economy. 

As Jakarta weighs the implications, the stakes couldn’t be higher.

Homegrown brands feeling the heat
GoTo is no ordinary company. It’s an economic engine, contributing an estimated 2% to Indonesia’s $1.37 trillion GDP in 2023, according to World Bank figures - roughly $26 billion in annual impact. 

With two million drivers powering its Gojek arm and 14 million merchants on Tokopedia , GoTo processed ride-hailing and delivery transactions worth $3 billion in 2024 alone. The sheer scale of its business has made it a linchpin of Indonesia’s tech ecosystem, supporting livelihoods of multitudes, from urban drivers to rural sellers.

Cracks have begun to appear in its foundation, though. In January 2024, GoTo sold a controlling stake in Tokopedia to TikTok for over $1.5 billion, ceding one of its crown jewels to a Chinese tech giant after regulatory pressure forced TikTok to partner locally to resume e-commerce operations in Indonesia. 

The deal eroded GoTo’s e-commerce muscle, leaving Gojek as its primary driver. Once a symbol of Indonesia’s startup ambitions, GoTo’s reduced scope makes it a juicier target for Grab - and a stark reminder of how quickly platform power can slip away. 

As one of Southeast Asia’s rare unicorns - companies valued over $1 billion- GoTo still carries national weight, but the Tokopedia’s loss underscores the fragility of that status. 

Regional powerhouse in the making
For Grab, the acquisition makes strategic sense. Valued at $18 billion, the company reported $2.8 billion in revenue in 2024, an 18% jump year-over-year , and serves 43 million monthly users across  eight countries. Acquiring GoTo could create a $40–50 billion powerhouse, blending Grab’s regional reach with GoTo’s 60 million active users. Analysts see potential for a dominant player in Southeast Asia’s e-commerce market, projected to reach $280 billion by the end of the decade. 

The upside is tangible: expanded operations could generate thousands of new jobs, building on GoTo’s existing two million-strong driver base. 

Enhanced scale might also accelerate innovation - think AI-optimized logistics or seamless cross-border payments - positioning the combined entity to compete with global heavyweights like Amazon or Singapore’s Sea Group, which already claims 40% of Indonesia’s e-commerce via Shopee. 

For Indonesia, a stake in this regional titan could amplify its voice on the global stage, provided it retains influence post-deal.

Gig workers and national leverage at stake
The sheen fades when viewed through the lens of Indonesia’s gig economy.  

Gojek’s two million drivers are a case in point. A 2022 study in Jakarta found that 70% depend on the platform as their primary income, earning $150–$200 monthly after expenses  - near Indonesia’s minimum wage. Incentives have already shrunk amid rising competition. GoTo’s domestic roots have kept it attuned to these workers’ needs, balancing profit with local realities. 

A Grab-led future might shift that dynamic. Its track record offers clues: in Singapore, driver commissions fell, prompting protests. Extending that approach to Indonesia’s larger, less-regulated market could exacerbate pressures on an already fragile workforce. 

Platform power is a safeguard - when a platform prioritizes national interests, worker welfare potentially triumphs shareholder value. If GoTo’s ownership moves offshore, Indonesia risks losing that buffer, leaving gig workers exposed to decisions made far from Jakarta’s streets.

Shaping the future 
Indonesia isn’t powerless. Governments worldwide have tools to manage such shifts - antitrust reviews, local ownership mandates, or worker protection clauses. 

India offers a playbook: its Unified Payments Interface (UPI) processed $1.5 trillion in transactions in 2024 , bolstering domestic platforms while keeping foreign players in check. Jakarta could impose conditions on the Grab-GoTo deal - say, retaining a minority stake or mandating gig worker benefits - to preserve its power.

The country’s 2020 Omnibus Law already aims to boost digital investment - tweaking it to exert local control could be a start.

Timing matters, too. Indonesia’s digital economy is projected to reach up to $360 billion by 2030, per e-Conomy SEA 2024 Report , with GoTo as a key driver. 

Letting it slip away risks stunting that growth - or worse, ceding it to rivals. Regulators have flexed before: in 2023, they tightened rules on foreign e-commerce to protect local firms . A similar move now could ensure this merger doesn’t hollow out Indonesia’s tech ambitions.

This isn’t about blocking progress - it’s about shaping it. Platform power, in this context, is more than mere market share; it’s about sovereignty over a digital ecosystem that shapes – and funds - daily life. A handover to Grab risks diluting that influence, raising questions on the potential custodians of Indonesia’s tech future.

Solution: All stakeholders - regulators, startups, and the workforce - should be asking the same questions. And they must be aligned with national interests. 

Rianovel Mare is a consultant and project manager at DinarStandard

10 Apr 2025
Insight
Halal Industry
Challenges, sensitivities dent lab-grown meat uptake  

Sustainable life choices and the desire to eat clean are encouraging people to seek alternate proteins, but challenges stymie its acceptance and uptake. 

Lab-grown – or cultivated – meat is not a novel concept but for all its growth and progress over the past two decades, it has struggled to take off after the initial wave of optimism. 

Lab-grown refers to meat developed outside the body of an animal, as opposed to the traditional method of slaughtering living animals. Stem cells are extracted from an animal, cultivated in large tanks called bioreactors, and fed an oxygen- and nutrient-rich cell culture medium. Stem cells differentiate into components such as muscle, fat, and connective tissue, which are later harvested, prepared, and packaged, according to the Good Food Institute (GFI).

Its uptake, though, remains fairly modest, with the number of companies dedicated to cultivated meat development worldwide totalling 170 in 2023, according to a GFI report.

Lab-grown meat offers several advantages over conventional farming and slaughtering, including a lower environmental footprint, minimized water usage and lesser refrigeration costs.

Supply chain touchpoints are also limited as opposed to those of traditional meat, which generally include farm and feedlot operations, packing, processing, and retail operations, leading to a carbon footprint of 22kg carbon dioxide equivalent per kg of live weight, according to a DP World insights piece published last September.  

However, several reasons have stymied the growth of lab-grown meat, including religious sensitivities, protection of agricultural industries and the safeguarding of farmers’ interests.

Some view the adoption of cultivated protein as an attack on traditions, leading to varied acceptance across major jurisdictions and markets.

In Muslim-majority countries such as Malaysia, the uptake of cultivated meat is expected to bank on religious and cultural sensitivities.  

“Since Malaysia is a Muslim-majority country, the acceptance of lab-grown meat depends on its halal status. The Department of Islamic Development Malaysia (JAKIM) plays a crucial role in determining whether the process and ingredients used comply with Islamic dietary laws,” Saliza Binti Mohd Elias, associate professor at the Universiti Putra Malaysia’s department of Environmental and Occupational Health tells Salaam Gateway. 

“We understand that consumer acceptance of cultivated meat varies, especially in different cultural and religious contexts. For Muslim consumers, we are fully committed to ensuring our cultivated meat and fish are halal-compliant,” Jason Ng, vice president manufacturing of Cell AgriTech Sdn Bhd tells Salaam Gateway. The company claims to be the first cultivated meat company in Malaysia. 

“According to our survey, cost is the main concern for most consumers in Malaysia and Singapore. However, as long as the taste, texture, and price are on par with traditional meat, people are open to buy especially since cultivated meat is healthier and more sustainable.”

Singapore’s Islamic Religious Council issued a guidance last year, permitting Muslims to consume cultivated meat based on certain conditions, broadening its potential consumer pool across the multi-ethnic country. 

From a price standpoint, cultivated meat may obtain cost parity with conventional meat by the end of the decade, with its market worth $25billion in size by then, according to McKinsey & Company. Companies operating in the space must then work on reducing production costs for economic viability. 

The tissue-engineering techniques fuelling cultivated meat is a key area of regenerative medicine and has long been used across the pharmaceutical industry. For the production of lab-grown meat, Cell AgriTech has replaced pharmaceutical-grade equipment and materials with food-grade alternatives, reducing production costs. 

“The goal of our tissue engineering platform is to produce structured meat and fish tissue with the right texture, nutrition, and mouthfeel - without relying on scaffolds made from non-food materials. This approach allows us to make cultivated meat affordable, scalable, and closer to the texture and experience of traditional meat,” adds Ng. 

Besides cost concerns, long-term health implications of lab-grown meat also remain unknown, which could potentially dent its acceptance. 

Cultivated meat may not have the same micronutrient profile as traditional meat, potentially lacking essential compounds found in natural animal tissue, according to Mohd Elias.

“If not properly monitored, contamination with bacteria or unwanted chemicals during the production process is possible.” 

Lab-grown meat is considered safe, but potential health concerns include unknown long-term effects, differences in nutrient composition, and risks related to growth factors, contamination, and additives, notes Dr. Mian N. Riaz, associate department head and holder of the Professorship in Food Diversity in the Department of Food Science & Technology at Texas A&M University.

“There is also speculation about potential immune responses, though no strong evidence supports this,” Dr. Riaz tells Salaam Gateway. 

On the flipside, because cultivated meat is grown in sterile conditions, it is free from harmful bacteria like Salmonella and E. coli, which are often found in conventional meat and can cause foodborne illnesses, ads Ng. 

Other factors such as traditions and protecting the sanctity of agriculture are also manifesting as key obstacles in the growth of this space.  

Italy, France and Australia submitted a note to the Council of the European Union in January last year stating that artificial cell-based food production practices represent "a threat to primary farm-based approaches and genuine food production methods that are at the very heart of the European farming model.”

The note, supported by nine other countries, added that European agriculture stands out for its farm-based and primary production approach. 

Acrosst the Atlantic, three US states – Mississippi, Florida and Alabama – banned the sale of cultivated meat products, months after authorities approved companies to produce them. Florida’s commissioner of agriculture Wilton Simpson hailed the move, stating at the time that they must protect “farmers and the integrity of American agriculture.” The state of Iowa passed a bill mandating specific labelling for cell-cultivated meat. 

Dr. Riaz adds that while other states like Arizona, Tennessee, and Nebraska have considered similar measures, opposition and legislative hurdles have prevented additional bans. 

“Lab-grown meat could disrupt traditional farming by reducing demand for conventionally farmed meat and impacting rural economies, especially if policies favour cultivated meat. However, it also presents opportunities for coexistence by meeting growing protein demand, promoting sustainability partnerships, and allowing farmers to diversify their businesses.” 

07 Apr 2025
Insight
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