Sharia law as primary or exclusive source of national legislation:
- Saudi Arabia – Fully based on Hanbali interpretation of Sharia; no formal civil or criminal code.
- Iran – Shia interpretation of Sharia governs most legal aspects.
- Afghanistan – Under Taliban rule, strict Deobandi interpretation of Sharia applies.
- Sudan – Reintroduced Sharia law under military leadership after democratic rollback
Countries where have parallel systems where Sharia courts govern personal matters (e.g., marriage, divorce, inheritance) for Muslims only:
- Nigeria – In 12 northern states, Sharia governs both civil and criminal law for Muslims.
- Pakistan – Civil law dominates, but Sharia courts have authority in key areas (e.g., Hudood laws, family law).
- Indonesia – National law is secular, but Aceh province enforces Sharia law (including criminal penalties).
- Malaysia – Dual system; Sharia courts handle family and personal issues for Muslims.
- United Arab Emirates – Civil law system influenced heavily by Sharia, especially in family and moral cases.
- Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman – Mix of civil and Sharia law, particularly in family and inheritance matters.
Sharia law is applied solely to Muslims in areas such as marriage, divorce, child custody, and inheritance:
- Egypt
- Jordan
- Morocco
- Algeria
- Tunisia
- Libya
- Syria
- Iraq
- Bangladesh
- India – Muslim Personal Law applies to Muslims under a religious community-based legal system.
- Kenya – Limited application in Kadhi courts for family law among Muslims.
Non-Muslim minorities: Generally not subject to Sharia, but enforcement can vary.
Criminal law: Full Sharia criminal codes (hudud punishments) are rare and mainly enforced in Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, and parts of Nigeria.
Definitivno, vse te države (ali pa vsaj večina) ima 10% muslimanov (ali pa malo več)