ESTABLISHED 2025

Confederation Parliament of Islamic States (CPIS)

A historic blueprint to unify the political, economic, security, technological, and cultural potential of the Islamic world.


Executive Summary

The blueprint aims to create a supranational parliamentary confederation that maintains national sovereignty while enabling strategic cooperation among member states.

  • A two-chamber legislative model
  • Unified economic architecture (Markets, Currency)
  • Strong security coordination & Peacekeeping
  • Time-bound 25-year roadmap

Chapter 1: Vision, Mission & Principles

Vision

To create a unified, cooperative, and ethically grounded supranational parliamentary system that brings together the political will, economic potential, and civilizational identity of the Islamic world.

  • Political Unity with Sovereign Diversity
  • Global Influence and Strategic Relevance
  • Renaissance of Islamic Civilization

Mission

To operationalize a modern, participatory, and highly functional governance system.

  • Establish a Bicameral Supranational Parliament
  • Harmonize Political & Economic Policies
  • Promote Good Governance (Shura & Adl)
  • Protect Islamic Identity & Heritage

Guiding Principles

Shura

Consultative Governance & Consensus-building.

Adalah

Justice, fairness, and equitable distribution.

Sovereignty

Non-interference in domestic affairs.

Solidarity

Mutual respect regarding sect, ethnicity, and culture.

Peace

Zero tolerance for inter-Muslim warfare.

Heritage

Preservation of Islamic identity and values.

Chapter 2: Governance Model

A bicameral parliamentary structure designed to balance sovereignty, representation, and efficiency.

Majlis al-A‘la (Upper House)

Headquartered in the USA
  • Mandate: Foreign policy, treaties, strategic security.
  • Membership: Appointed delegates (8-year terms).
  • Focus: Global engagement & Arbitration.

Majlis al-Sufla (Lower House)

Headquartered in an Islamic Country
  • Mandate: Drafting legislation, budget oversight.
  • Membership: Elected/Appointed (4-year terms).
  • Focus: Internal policies, trade, culture.

Committee System

Economy & Trade
Defense Coordination
Science & Tech
Humanitarian Affairs
Islamic Finance
Legal Affairs
Women & Youth
Energy & Resources
Digital Integration

Chapter 3: Economic Union

Creating a prosperous, self-reliant, and globally competitive Islamic economic bloc.

Islamic Common Market

Remove tariffs, standardize customs, and allow labor mobility (25–40% growth expected).

Unified Halal Trade Zone

A confederation-wide Halal Certification Authority and blockchain-enabled traceability.

Islamic Digital Currency (IDC)

A Shariah-compliant digital currency to reduce dependence on Western financial networks.

Shared Wealth Development Fund

Target $500 Billion fund for infrastructure, poverty alleviation, and industrial projects.

Chapter 4: Defense & Security

Goal: Zero tolerance for inter-Muslim armed conflict and collective security against external aggression.

CPIS Peacekeeping Force

A deployable multi-national force for crisis stabilization and humanitarian protection.

Anti-Terror Intelligence (ATIN)

Shared intelligence database and AI-driven predictive threat assessment.

Cyber Defense Alliance

Protecting critical digital infrastructure, financial systems, and energy grids.

Joint Procurement (JDPC)

Cost optimization through bulk manufacturing of drones, vehicles, and naval vessels.

Chapter 5: Education, Culture & Science

Key Initiatives

  • Union-wide Scholarship Program: Mobility for students in STEM and Governance.
  • Pan-Islamic University Consortium: Joint degrees and credit transfer systems.
  • CPIS Research Centers: Focus on AI, aerospace, renewable energy, and climate science.
  • Heritage Protection Agency: Digitizing manuscripts and restoring historical sites.

Chapter 6: Social & Humanitarian

Prioritizing equity, human dignity, and poverty alleviation.

Refugee Support

Standardized legal protection, shelter, and integration for displaced populations.

Health Network

Sharing data on epidemics, vaccination, and emergency medical corps.

Empowerment

Specific councils for Women and Youth leadership and innovation.

Chapter 7: Infrastructure & Technology

Trans-Islamic Fiber Optic Grid

Establish a high-speed, secure digital network connecting all member states to support digital sovereignty.

CPIS Satellite Constellation

Communication and Earth Observation satellites for climate monitoring and border security.

Transport Corridors

  • Middle East – South Asia Corridor: Energy and Industrial integration.
  • North Africa – Middle East: Logistics and Trade.
  • Central Asia – Türkiye: Minerals and Agriculture.

Chapter 8: Phased Implementation Plan

A 25-year roadmap to full maturity.

Phase 1: Foundation (Years 1-3)

Treaty ratification, Secretariat establishment, and Committee appointments.

Phase 2: Activation (Years 3-7)

Launch of Upper/Lower houses, first legislation passed, public engagement.

Phase 3: Integration (Years 7-15)

Economic union operational, Peacekeeping force deployed, industrial corridors built.

Phase 4: Maturity (Years 15-25)

Unified global diplomacy, full digital currency adoption, advanced research hubs.

Chapter 9: Expected Impact

Domain Key Performance Indicator (KPI)
Economic Intra-confederation trade growth +25–40%
Strategic 100% interoperability of peacekeeping operations
Social 20–30% Poverty reduction in member states
Cultural Doubling of scientific output by Year 20

CONSTITUTIONAL CHARTER

Majlis Ittihad Dawlat al-Islam

PREAMBLE

In the Name of Allah, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate. Recognizing the divine mandate of unity (wahda), justice (‘adl), consultation (shura), and cooperation (ta‘awun), the sovereign Islamic States hereby agree to establish the Confederation Parliament of Islamic States (CPIS).

ARTICLE I – NAME & NATURE

Section 1: This institution shall be known as the Confederation Parliament of Islamic States (CPIS).
Section 2: It is a supranational, intergovernmental parliamentary institution based on consultation, respecting full sovereignty.

ARTICLE II – MEMBERSHIP

Full membership is open to all sovereign states constitutionally identifying as Islamic or having a Muslim-majority population. Associate status is available to states with significant Muslim minorities.

ARTICLE III – STRUCTURE
  • The Upper House (Majlis al-A‘la): Located in the United States.
  • The Lower House (Majlis al-Sufla): Located in a designated Islamic state.
  • Joint Constitutional Council: Empowered to reconcile disagreements.
ARTICLE VI – PRINCIPLES

The CPIS operates on Shura, Justice, Respect for Sovereignty, Economic Fairness, and Peaceful Cooperation.

This Charter enters force upon signature and ratification by at least 10 founding Islamic states.