Mufti Muhammad Akmal is a Pakistani Islamic cleric who gained national fame through his program "Ahkam-e-Shariat" broadcast on ARY Qtv, a religious affiliate of one of Pakistan’s largest media groups. Week after week, Mufti Akmal sat comfortably in front of cameras, donning traditional garb, calmly telling millions that Muslims should not befriend non-Muslims. His tone was soft, but the message was razor sharp: segregation, religious supremacy, and an ideology of exclusivity—not his personal opinions, but “what the Qur’an commands.”
He isn't a fringe preacher in a dusty madrassa—he is mainstream. He was prime-time television.
📢 Not Extremism, Just Literalism
Let’s be clear: Mufti Akmal didn’t invent these ideas. He didn’t need to. His sermon content is taken straight from Qur'anic verses like:
“O you who have believed, do not take the Jews and the Christians as allies.”
— Qur'an 5:51
This isn’t “radical Islam.”
This is Islam, unfiltered, as taught by its most widely accepted scholars. Mufti Akmal doesn’t twist verses. He recites them. Word for word. And millions listened.
He merely echoed what the book says, verbatim. That’s the terrifying part. There was no need for ISIS-style theatrics. Just a calm man in a turban, on your screen, telling your children whom to hate.
Mufti Akmal didn’t need to bomb anyone. He only needed a mic, a camera, and a book.
That’s how soft jihad works: convert the hearts before the swords are even needed.
No notable events have been recorded for this Mullah.