Independent Quality Audit & Certification (Halal & Safety)
This criterion assesses the extent to which the organization utilizes independent third-party audits and certifications to ensure the quality, safety, and Halal compliance of its products and services. It mandates a rigorous 'Halal Policy Baseline' to define specific standards (e.g., stunning, enzymes, alcohol) and requires a robust 'Certifier Due Diligence' process to verify accreditation (UKAS/IAF) and Shari’ah governance. The criterion examines the scope and frequency of audits, the credibility of certifying bodies, the implementation of corrective actions (CAPA) with effectiveness verification, and the transparency of reporting. It includes strict controls for high-risk inputs (e.g., gelatine, meat derivatives) and a responsive stop-use/stop-sale protocol. This aligns with the Qur’anic injunction against deceit (83:1‑3) and the principle of *Tathabbut* (verification), ensuring products meet *Hifz al-nafs* (safety) and *Hifz al-din* (Halal integrity). The organization must maintain a due diligence defense file to substantiate claims and prevent consumer deception.
Al-Bayyinah 'ala al-mudda'i
The burden of proof is on the claimant. A third-party certificate serves as 'bayyinah' (proof) for Halal/safety claims.
Tathabbut
Verification and deliberation. Ensuring evidence is authentic before accepting it.
Sadd al-dhara’i
Blocking the means to harm. Proactive audits prevent fraud and safety risks.
Maslaha Mursalah
Public interest. Protecting consumers from unsafe or non-Halal products.
Hifz al-Nafs
Preservation of Life - ensured through safety audits and allergen controls.
Hifz al-Din
Preservation of Religion - ensured through Halal integrity and fraud prevention.
Related Criteria
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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