In a bid to navigate the complex intersection of digital innovation and Islamic jurisprudence, the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority has formally engaged one of the country’s most prestigious Islamic seminaries to refine its stance on digital assets. Authority Chairman Bilal bin Saqib has requested Jamia Darul Uloom Karachi to draw a clear distinction between highly speculative cryptocurrencies and asset-backed digital tokens. This regulatory outreach follows a significant religious decree issued by the seminary last month, which declared transactions made with cryptocurrencies to be impermissible under Islamic law.
The religious ruling, or fatwa, was issued on June ten by Mufti Taqi Usmani alongside six other prominent scholars. The decree described cryptocurrency as nothing more than the recording of fictitious numbers in an account and concluded that digital tokens do not qualify as recognized wealth, or maal, under Shariah principles. Because religious decrees carry immense weight in Pakistan, which consistently ranks as one of the largest retail cryptocurrency markets globally, the ruling has introduced unexpected hurdles for the government’s aggressive plans to integrate and license digital asset service providers.
In response to the decree, the regulatory chief has emphasized the necessity of analyzing digital assets through a segmented approach rather than treating them as a single, uniform asset class. While the regulator acknowledges the valid concerns raised by scholars regarding purely speculative tokens that lack any intrinsic value, it argues that other blockchain-based instruments function on entirely different economic principles. For instance, stablecoins backed by fiat currency reserves, gold-denominated tokens, and blockchain-recorded sukuk represent direct ownership of tangible, real-world assets.
According to the regulator, blockchain technology is fundamentally a sophisticated ledger system for record-keeping and verification rather than a speculative financial asset in itself. By evaluating assets individually based on their underlying redeemable claims, the regulatory authority believes Pakistan can establish a robust, legally sound framework that aligns modern financial technology with Islamic law. The authority plans to maintain close collaboration with Islamic scholars to ensure upcoming licensing frameworks, stablecoin guidelines, and real-world asset tokenization projects meet rigorous Shariah compliance standards.
Market experts suggest that while the fatwa has not immediately depressed local cryptocurrency trading volumes, the unresolved religious status of digital assets could slow down formal, bank-led adoption beyond the country’s urban trading hubs. The ongoing dialogue between state regulators and religious authorities remains critical as the country seeks to position itself as a hub for Shariah-compliant digital finance. The regulatory leadership has reaffirmed its commitment to ensuring that technological progress does not bypass the ethical and legal foundations defined by traditional scholars.
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