1. Meat Handled, Processed, Packed and Transported by Non-Muslims.
Allah In the name of , Most Compassionate, Most Merciful,
Question :   It is incorrect to say that Halal and  lawfully slaughtered meat is rendered Haram simply due to the handling  of a non-Muslim.
Answer :   
 According to my limited research, no book of Islamic  jurisprudence (fiqh) states that meat or any other product handled by a  non-Muslim is rendered Haram. On the contrary, we find texts of  classical jurists (fuqaha) asserting clearly that the handling of a  non-Muslim does not render a Halal product Haram. One such example is  provided below:
The author of the renowned Hanafi Fiqh Manual,Al-Hidaya states:
 “If an individual [Muslim] sends his employee or servant who is a  fire-worshipper [i.e. non-Muslim, non-Jew and non-Christian] to purchase  some meat, and he says that I purchased this meat from a Jew, Christian  or Muslim, then it will be permitted for the Muslim to consume of the  meat. This is due to the fact that a non-Muslim’s word is accepted in  transactions (mu’amalat)…” (Al-Hidaya 4/453)
In the above text, the meat was purchased and handled by a non-Muslim  on behalf of a Muslim, but it was not rendered Haram. Rather, the  non-Muslim servant’s claim that he had purchased the meat from a Muslim  was also considered acceptable.
One must remember, however, that the permissibility here is of  accepting the word of a non-Muslim employee or servant who knows how  important Halal consumption is for his employer or master, and also  there is no conflict of interest. This is different to the situation  where there is ‘reasonable’ fear that a particular meat is possibly  Haram — or when it is generally the case that meat labelled ‘Halal’ is  dubious. In such cases, it would be one’s duty to make sure.
As such, it is important to ensure that the meat sold is actually  Halal and the element of doubt is removed. However, if there is  certainty that the animal had been slaughtered by a Muslim, and the meat  was monitored and transported in such a manner that left no room for  doubting that the animal may have been slaughtered in a un-Islamic way  or that the Halal meat may have been mixed up with Haram meat, then this  Halal meat will not be rendered Haram simply because it was handled and  transported by a non-Muslim. Had this been the case, everything bar a  few products would become Haram since they are all handled and packed by  non-Muslims.
 Nevertheless, the point that is clear from the above text of  Al-Hidaya is that the handling, packaging and transporting of a  non-Muslim does not render the meat Haram, after it is ensured that the  animal was slaughtered in accordance with the rules of Shari’a, and that  the Halal meat was not mixed up or contaminated with Haram meat.
 
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