The Charter of Makkah is a pan-Islamic set of principles which support and promote anti-extremism, religious and cultural diversity, and calls for legislation against hate-motivated crimes and violence The document was declared at the end of a four-day conference organized by the Muslim World League in Makkah. It was approved by Islamic leaders of 139 countries and signed by around 1,300 prominent Muslim figures.
The principles of the Charter will be implemented in activities already defined in the SDGs, which we have been mapped to both the Jurisprudence of Life framework and the domains of human social and economic concerns of hunger, homelessness, disease, illiteracy, marginalization, insecurity, oppression, and poverty. These activities will reflect the 29 clauses of the Charter, which call for the consolidation of the values of coexistence and achieving peace between the different components of society through actions.