Does a border guard have to offer expiation if he kills a smuggler?

Question Does a man who is guarding the border have to offer expiation by fasting for two months if he kills a smuggler during an exchange of fire?. Praise be to Allah. He does not have to anything, either offering expiation (kafaarah) or paying blood money (diyah), because he killed him to ward off his…

Question

Does a man who is guarding the border have to offer expiation by fasting for two months if he kills a smuggler during an exchange of fire?.

Praise be to Allah.

He does not have to anything, either offering expiation
(kafaarah) or paying blood money (diyah), because he killed him to ward off
his evil and to defend himself.

Ibn Qudaamah said in al-Mughni (9/152): With regard to
anyone who assails a person to take his wealth or kill him, the ruling is
the same as that which we have mentioned about the one who enters his house,
warding them off with the least with which they can be warded off. If there
is between him and them a large river or a ditch or a fortress that they
cannot breach, then he has no right to shoot at them, but if he has no
option but to fight them, then he has the right to fight them and kill them.
Ahmad said concerning thieves who want to kill you and take your wealth:
Fight them to defend yourself and your wealth. ‘Ata’ said concerning a
muhrim (pilgrim in ihraam) who is overwhelmed by thieves: Let him fight them
in the fiercest manner. Ibn Sireen said: I do not know anyone who suggested
not fighting the Harooris and thieves because he thought it was wrong,
unless he was a coward. Al-Salt ibn Turayf said: I said to al-Hasan: I
travel in all directions and I am afraid that the thieves may attack me for
my wealth. If I refrain from fighting they will take my wealth, but if I
fight them, you know what could happen. He said: O my son, whoever attacks
you for your wealth, if you kill him then he will go to Hell, and if he
kills you then you will be a shaheed (martyr). Something similar was
narrated from Anas, al-Sha’bi and al-Nakha’i. Ahmad said of a woman whom a
man wanted to rape, but she killed him in self-defence: If she knew that he
wanted to have his way with her and she killed him in self-defence, then
there is no sin on her. And he quoted a hadeeth that was narrated by
al-Zuhri from al-Qaasim ibn Muhammad from ‘Ubayd ibn ‘Umayr, that a man gave
hospitality to some people of Hudhayl, and he wanted to have his way with a
woman among them, but she threw a stone at him and killed him. ‘Umar said:
By Allaah, no blood money will ever be paid for him (i.e., there was no
diyah for him), because if it is permissible for a man to defend his
property which he is permitted to dispose of, then it is more appropriate
that it be permissible for a woman to defend herself and protect herself
against rape which is not permissible under any circumstances. End quote.

Al-Mardaawi said in al-Insaaf (6/243): If a person is
attacked by a human or anything else, and he kills him in self-defence, he
is not liable. This is the correct view and is the view of our companions.
End quote.

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