Tuesday, December 24, 2013

FREE KANO SPEAKER & LEGISLATORS NOW

25th December, 2013

PRESS RELEASE:
FREE KANO SPEAKER & LEGISLATORS NOW

The speaker of the Kano State House of Assembly, Hon Gambo Sallau, clerk of the House and nine other legislators were yesterday arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). They were alleged to have fraudulently approved a supplementary budget of N28 billion.    

We are surprised at the newfound agility of EFCC who just a few days ago complained that it had less than N2 million in its account and therefore could not pursue its legitimate functions. Could it mean that the presidency had been deliberately stinting EFCC of funds in order to bring it to its knees and consequently compel it to do its beck and call? It just doesn’t add up. Where and how did EFCC suddenly find its lost appetite for pursuing allegedly corrupt legislators?

Or are we witnessing a conspiracy theory postulating a presidential pound of flesh? The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) finds it very curious that All Progressive Congress (APC) states are beginning to bear the brunt of EFCC’s sharp teeth. Lagos Assembly is already licking its wounds as EFCC operatives keep hounding its speaker and some of its members. Is it now the turn of Kano?

The witch cried yesterday and the child died today. The case is just too glaring. The fact that the five governors who defected to the APC chose Kano as the venue for the announcement of their defection makes EFCC’s descent on Kano more intriguing. Is Kano being punished for its audacity? If this is so, the noose must be tightening around the neck of the governor of Kano.

It had better not be. Politics of vindictiveness is capable of killing Nigeria’s nascent democracy. Napoleon Bonaparte was visionary when he said the only lesson men learn from history is that they learn nothing from history.

Why have our leaders failed to learn from the causes of military intervention in the politics of Nigeria? Why was the South-West called the Wild Wild West in the early 60s? What was the casus belli of ‘operation wet e’? Where are the tyrants of yesterday? Where is Hitler of Germany? Where is Mussolini of Italy? Where is Idi Amin Dada of Uganda?

The rulers of Nigeria today must decide whether they want their names printed in letters of gold or dumped in the dustbin of history. Divisional Police Officers now storm the venue where whole state governors are holding meetings simply because they belong to the opposition. It is infra dignitatem.

Policemen block governors from using roads and seal up opposition secretariats. Police chiefs withdraw security details of state chief executives and the opposition is not free to associate or hold meetings. Aircrafts used by opposition members are not allowed to use the Nigerian airspace. 

This government’s cup of sins is not only full, it is already spilling over. Civil society must rise now before it is too late. Both the church and the mosque must speak out against totalitarian dictatorship because their followers will all be affected by the consequences of bad governance if they fail to speak out now.

MURIC therefore urges religious leaders to abandon the traditional triangular orientation which takes the faithful from the mosque to work and back to the house. We must watch politicians and caution them when necessary because their actions or inactions, successes and failures, competence and ineptitude, tyranny or kind disposition is bound to affect all and sundry.

Bad governance is responsible for the darkness in Nigeria today: that is why there is no electricity. Executive ineptitude is to blame for the degradation in the education sector. That was why strike paralysed the universities for six months. Neither the church nor the mosque enjoys electricity today.

Both Christian and Muslim parents as well as their sons and daughters suffered tremendously from the strike that just ended. Religious leaders are therefore vital stakeholders. We must not remain silent in the face of oppression because what goes round comes around.

We also call on well-meaning Nigerians and elder statesmen not to sit on the fence. We charge the international community to start warning the Nigerian government concerning the threat to the rule of law, restrictions to freedom of movement and abuse of executive power.

Finally, MURIC calls for the immediate and unconditional release of the Kano legislators. EFCC must also drop its charges against Lagos legislators or table water-tight evidence against them if there is any in a court of law.

We are constrained to express palpable fear over the conduct of 2015 general elections. A government which stifles the opposition and witch-hunts defectors cannot be trusted to conduct a free and fair election.

The law establishing EFCC must also be amended to give the body full autonomy and freedom from intervention or influence from the presidency.

Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
08182119714

Monday, December 23, 2013

CHRISTMAS MESSAGE


24th December, 2013
CHRISTMAS MESSAGE:
CHRISTIANS & MUSLIMS MUST UNITE FOR PEACE & PROGRESS

Christians of many denominations all over the globe will tomorrow mark the birth of Jesus (Peace be upon him). To this end, the Federal Government of Nigeria has declared Wednesday 25th and Thursday 26th December, 2013 as holidays.

We of the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) seize the opportunity of this august occasion to remind Nigerians of the high pedestal on which Jesus is placed in Islam. The Glorious Qur’an describes Jesus as a “righteous prophet (Qur’an 6:85) and he is “held in honour in this world and the hereafter and of those nearest to Allah” (3:45).

MURIC reaffirms its resolve to respect the rights of people of other faiths to observe their festivals and the attendant holidays without let or hinderance. We call for peaceful coexistence and dissociate ourselves from any group which carries out or encourages attacks on Christians and their places of worship as this stands in contradistinction from the true teachings of Islam.

We assert clearly and unambiguously that contrary to the distorted doctrine of violent groups, Al-Jannah does not lie at the feet of killers of Christians and bombers of churches but rather it is, first and foremost, attained with the incomprehensible grace of Almighty Allah and bestowed upon righteous Muslims who extend charity, love and tolerance to their neighbours.

MURIC charges Christian leaders to join hands with the leadership of Nigerian Muslims in the struggle to expel all vestiges of aggression from the land, whether it is greedy politicians who corruptly arrogate to themselves all the milk and honey in the land or mindless criminals who make life unsafe for the citizens. We have no doubt that religious leaders can use the powerful tools of faith to save Nigerians from insecurity, ignorance, hunger and disease.

Instead of engaging in unwarranted acrimony and sensational finger-pointing, the leadership of the body of Christ in Nigeria and the Muslim Ummah can explore the deep abyss of divinity to unite Nigerians for peace and progress.
                                             
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
08182119714

Monday, December 16, 2013

OBASANJO'S MISSIVE: ASO ROCK IS PROCRASTINATING

16th December, 2013

PRESS RELEASE:

OBASANJO’S MISSIVE: ASO ROCK IS PROCRASTINATING



Former President Olusegun Obasanjo wrote an 18 page-letter to President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan a few days ago raising grave concern over some very serious national issues.



Most prominent among the issues raised in Obasanjo’s monumental missive are the allegation that the president is destroying the party; that he is currently training 1,000 snipers to deal with opposition figures; that the president is not sincere about the war on corruption and that the president has maintained a conspiratorial silence each time his clansmen threatened the rest of Nigeria.



The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) observes that Obasanjo took it upon himself to write the letter as a major stakeholder in the ruling party (the People’s Democratic Party, PDP) having ruled the country under the umbrella of the same PDP for two terms and having served as the Chairman, Board of Trustees (BOT) for several years. The fact that the historical letter came soon after the defection of five state governors from the PDP is quite didactic and shows the major raison d’ĂȘtre for Obasanjo’s letter.  



MURIC notes that the letter was dated 2nd December, 2013 and we are worried that President Jonathan is yet to react to the main allegations two weeks after it was written. Instead, the president has taken shelter in the bosom of boot-lickers and court-jesters. Is President Jonathan waiting for angels to bring him answers from heaven?



The issues raised are too fundamental to be brushed aside. They have to do with the core principles of democracy: probity, accountability, justice, fairplay and equal rights. They have to do with the welfare of the Nigerian people and how to bring food to the common man’s table. We are talking of the security of lives and properties and the president of this country who has been accused of training professional assassins keeps mute. How can there be security when the president himself becomes a threat? The chief security officer becomes the major threat to security of lives. It is unheard of. The president must break the ice. Nigerians are running out of patience to hear the president’s defence.



It is on record that when the neocon-dominated Grand Old Party (GOP) accused US President Barrack Obama of pursuing a foreign policy of appeasement, Obama fired back within 24 hours whether the killing of Osama bin Laden and about 22 other key figures of Al-Qaedah fits into that allegation, the GOP promptly put its tail between its legs like a frightened dog and ran off the stage.



MURIC is asking Mr. President why it must take him a whole projected second term (2015 – 2019) to answer the Tsunami-igniting allegations leveled against him by a former head of state who should know.



We reject NNPC’s lame explanation that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) does not know the procedure for tracking Nigeria’s oil money. That line of reasoning is myopic, infantile and therefore unacceptable. It is designed to mislead gullible Nigerians. CBN is on track on this issue of missing $49.8b. CBN is not meddling into oil exploitation or its drilling. CBN is talking about facts and figures of oil income and that is CBN’s constituency. For Allah’s sake somebody somewhere is milking Nigeria dry in preparation for 2015!



Or what is Jonathan’s take on Oduahgate? Why is the president silent on this N255m scandal? If the president considers Stella Oduah as a sacred cow, then he has desecrated his sacred office. This woman has been indicted by the committees which investigated her. Is there no limit to executive protection of thieves and rogues in this country? What message is Mr. President trying to pass to civil servants, artisans, teachers and students and other young Nigerians? Is Nigeria’s image irredeemable? Should honest Nigerians say goodbye to transparency out of frustration? Mr. President’s body language seems to be saying a capital YES to each of these questions.



A female minister was removed by the president of Ghana a few weeks ago. The minister had not actually stolen money. She merely expressed the wish to amass wealth. Why is Nigeria’s case different? Why is Stella Oduah a tin god in Aso Rock?



A president who declares the candidate who scores 16 votes as the winner and treats the candidate who scores 19 as a criminal; a president who enters into a pledge to serve only one term only to turn around to deny the existence of such an agreement; a president under whom members of the opposition are denied right to use the Nigerian airspace; a president who orders or condones the marking of opposition secretariat and their private properties for destruction; a president who looks the other way as police torment a whole state governor; a president under whose watchful eyes a serving minister threatens to make life unbearable for a state governor is not fit to be the bastion of our fledgling democracy.



Nigerians are itching to get answers for these and other issues raised by former President Obasanjo. The National Assembly should stand firm on this issue. The nation’s lawmakers must remember the words of Malcolm X, “Power never takes a back step, only in the face of greater power”, the corroborative compliment of Noah Webster who said, “Power is always right, weakness always wrong. Power is always insolent and despotic” and Thomas Jefferson’s nail in the coffin of tyrants, "Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God." NASS must compel President Jonathan to explain the rationale behind his actions. NASS is the last hope of the people.



Aso Rock is procrastinating and procrastination is the thief of time. Further delay is not acceptable to Nigerians. Jonathan must speak up now.



Professor Ishaq Akintola,

Director,

Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)

08182119714

Thursday, November 28, 2013

WE REJECT SENATE’S POSITION ON APO KILLINGS


29th November, 2013
PRESS RELEASE:
WE REJECT SENATE’S POSITION ON APO KILLINGS

The Senate on Wednesday 27th November, 2013 declared that the eight people killed by security agents in Apo Quarters were not members of Boko Haram but the Upper House cleared the Nigerian security agencies of culpability in the death of the workers.

It will be recalled that eight Keke Napep operators were killed by security agents as they squatted in an uncompleted building at Soji Aderemi Close, Apo Legislative Quarters, Abuja, on 20th September, 2013.

We note with deep concern the obvious contradiction in the report. Whereas Senate admits that the victims were not members of Boko Haram, it went ahead to absolve the security agencies who carried out the dastardly act.

We of the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) condemn this double standard in the strongest terms. This type of thing should not be happening in a democracy. Life is sacred and security agencies have no right under the law to kill and maim at will. It is sheer manifestation of impunity.

MURIC finds the testimonies in the minority reports more credible. We commend Senators Mohammed Sani Saleh (Kaduna Central) and Senator Kabiru Garba Marafa (Zamfara Central) for their courageous stand and their rejection of the report. We are of the considered opinion that Senate has allowed religious sentiment to becloud its sense of judgement. Senate has failed the people of Nigeria.

We therefore urge families and friends of the victims to seek redress in the courts. MURIC pledges to render every necessary assistance in this regard until the culprits are brought to book. Nigerian security agencies must learn to respect constitutionalism, rule of law, equal rights, justice and fairplay.

Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
08182119714


Saturday, November 23, 2013

ARREST OF DR. NAZEEF: MURIC CALLS FOR CAUTION


24th November, 2013
PRESS RELEASE:
TERRORISM CHARGE AGAINST DR NAZEEF:
MURIC CALLS FOR CAUTION

The State Security Service (SSS) recently paraded Dr. Muhammad Nazeef, a lecturer of Islamic Studies at the Kogi State University and four others (Umar Musa, Mustapha Yusuf, Ismaila Abdulazez and Ibrahim Isah) who had been detained on suspicion of being members of a Boko Haram cell in Kogi State. Whereas his co-detainees testified against him, Dr. Nazeef has vehemently maintained his innocence.   

While we realize the need for the law to take its due course, we equally see the necessity for proper investigation of the matter in order to avoid a situation whereby an innocent man is unjustly punished. Dr. Nazeef is a well known Islamic scholar who has spoken against terrorism and violence in his public lectures. The fact that he holds a doctorate degree in Islamic Studies means that he has deep knowledge of Islam and cannot compromise Islam’s true teachings of peace and peaceful coexistence for the distorted Boko Haram ideology of bestial violence and terror.

Again while we admit the fact that the security agencies must do their job, we remind them of the sophisticated approach of the Boko Haram group. We strongly suspect that Dr. Nazeef may have been targeted for vengeance by the group because of his condemnation of their activities.

Nigeria is witnessing another phase in Boko Haramism. Having faced a solid wall in its guerrilla warfare against the Nigerian state, the group is now graduating into advanced psychological warfare. It has mastered the advanced plot of setting up one enemy to be eliminated by another enemy.

Boko Haram is now using its members to set up Islamic scholars who speak against them. Security agents have swallowed the bait: hook, line and sinker. The four men who testified against Dr. Nazeef are the guinea pigs. The question may arise: who is the next Islamic scholar that Boko Haram will set up before Nigerian security agents read between the lines?

It is an open secret that Boko Haram regards Islamic scholars who condemn terrorism and violence as their enemies primus inter pareil. The group is known to have assassinated several Islamic scholars when the group was still very strong. They are now reverting to subterfuge in their days of weakness. Boko Haram is out to get in the bends what it could not get in the straights.

They may have roped in Dr. Nazeef using those who testified against him. This is a group that believes in dying for a cause in which it believes. This is a group that has sent its members out on missions of no return in the past. What will it cost them to send three or more people to mislead security agents so long as it will lead to the incarceration of a long-time foe?

The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) therefore appeals to the SSS to look before it leaps. Our hypothesis is that SSS may indirectly be doing to Dr. Nazeef what Boko Haram actually wants to do to him. This may produce a negative effect on Islamic scholars nationwide. Those who have been condemning Boko Haram and terrorism may crawl back into their shells for fear of being targeted by the dreaded terror group while those who have been timid and silent on the issue will now prefer to remain silent forever. The result of this development is the unfettered growth of terror cells.

While MURIC reaffirms its condemnation of terrorism, we remind security agents that they cannot fight terrorism alone. They need information and cooperation from civilians. There is no gainsaying the fact that it is the Muslims who can be most useful in this regard particularly on the Boko Haram affair while it is Islamic scholars who can effectively counter Boko Haram indoctrination. What message is the SSS passing across if it continues to detain the same Islamic scholars?

It must be noted that Nigerian Muslims have been united in condemning Boko Haram and Islamic scholars have dug deep into the scriptures of Islam (the Glorious Qur’an and the Hadith of the Holy Prophet SAW) to puncture Boko Haram’s misleading ideology. This is why the violent group regards Islamic scholars as their numero uno foes and always targets them for elimination.

SSS and other security outfits may therefore be cutting their noses to spite their faces by detaining and prosecuting Islamic scholars. It may be a sophisticated Boko Haram strategy. Our security agents may be waging Boko Haram’s war against Islamic scholars on behalf of Boko Haram.

On the basis of the above thesis, MURIC affirms that the arrest of Dr. Muhammad Nazeef can only be counter-productive. We call on the SSS to urgently review the case and set him free. SSS must determine who it is working for: Boko Haram or the Nigeria State? To continue detaining those who speak against Boko Haram is to work indirectly for the terror group.

MURIC appeals to Islamic scholars and organizations who have been apprehensive since the arrest of Dr. Nazeef to relax. We also urge leaders of Islamic organizations throughout Nigeria to douse tension among their members. Suspicions of witch-hunting and profiling of Muslims and Islamic scholars by security agents should not be allowed to germinate at this point in time when the nation needs the prayers of Islamic scholars for Nigeria’s spiritual growth and the peaceful conduct of the Muslim population for economic development.

Finally, MURIC urges the Security Committees of both Senate and the House of Representatives to examine the circumstances surrounding the case of Dr. Nazeef against the background of his impeccable record of positive spiritual guidance for Muslims and his past condemnation of violence, terrorism and Boko Haramism.

Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
08182119714


Sunday, November 17, 2013

ANAMBRA ELECTION: WE CONDEMN HARASSMENT OF OPPOSITION


17th November, 2013

PRESS RELEASE:

ANAMBRA ELECTION: WE CONDEMN HARASSMENT OF OPPOSITION



The gubernatorial election was held in Anambra yesterday with reports of irregularities, violence and intervention by security operatives. Election was cancelled in 65 wards. Men of the State Security Services (SSS) also allegedly put Mallam Nasir El-Rufai under house arrest while about 120 APC supporters who were on their way to Anambra were detained in Owerri, Imo State.



These are very disturbing developments. Nigeria should be able to do better after several years of democratic experience. The cancellation of election in 65 wards which the opposition describes as its stronghold gives cause for serious concern. In the same vein, the curtailment of the movement of Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, a key opposition figure, to a hotel room is an unacceptable breach of his fundamental right of movement, election or no election.



The detention of several opposition members whom the opposition claims were election observers is symptomatic of arbitrary use of security agents. The intention of the authors of this action can only be antithetical to democratic principles.



The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) calls for the immediate lifting of the house arrest imposed on El-Rufai and the unconditional release of the APC election observers. A situation where party agents and observers are coerced is bound to create suspicion and its attendant fallouts. We assert that a free and fair election is sine qua non in a true democracy. A level playing ground must be provided for all the parties contesting in elections.



Professor Ishaq Akintola,

Director,

Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)

08182119714



Monday, November 11, 2013

WE REJECT MISCHIEVOUS PRE-NATIONAL CONFERENCE MEETINGS

12th November, 2013

PRESS RELEASE:

WE REJECT MISCHIEVOUS PRE-NATIONAL CONFERENCE MEETINGS



The Presidential Committee on the proposed National Conference has held two sittings in the South West to date (one in Akure, Ondo State and the other in Lagos).



It was not an accident that Friday was picked on both occasions while the time for starting the sittings was 1.30 pm. We assert clearly, unambiguously and unequivocally that neither the day picked nor the time was coincidental. The members of the committee are not foreigners. They knew what they were doing. There is no single Nigerian who does not know that Friday is the day of worship for Muslims and that the time for Jum’ah prayer is 12.30 to 2.30 pm.



To have slated such a sensitive sitting for the Muslim prayer time is not only mischievous but preposterous, disdainful and absolutely unacceptable. It is also most undemocratic because democracy is all about participation and equal opportunity to participate. It is also an invitation to chaos. What if the marginalized Muslims had stormed the venue with protests? Could it have been done out of ignorance? But how can the committee claim to be ignorant in such a very sensitive circumstance?



The result of this badly planned pre-National Conference meeting held in Akure and Lagos was the exclusion of the Muslim population and their representatives. This is a significant misrepresentation particularly in a region in which the Muslims form the majority. It reveals an unnecessary attempt to rush the National Conference. The outcome of such a conference can only scratch the surface. Only the deep can call to the deep. The plan as presently designed will merely sweep the issues under the carpet. A country that has long been bedeviled with ethnic and religious conflicts need more serious planning.



Furthermore, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) regards the need to raise and fully discuss religious matters at the conference as fundamental and non-negotiable. There is no gainsaying the fact that religion has been responsible for most conflicts in this country. Why then are the organizers of the purported ‘National Conference’ laying emphasis on ethnicity alone? Any attempt to hold a national conference in this country without discussing religion will be an exercise in futility. The injustice of the colonial masters against the Muslims must be discussed at the conference.



MURIC contends that Nigeria as it stands today is a neocolonialist project serving the purpose of the colonial master and the imperialists alone. The colonialists adopted a parochial method through which they virtually eliminated all vestiges of Islam which they met on ground. This they did by using sheer force, divide et impera and so many other subterfuges. The British bequeathed to us a legacy which was heavily tainted with their own perception of religion in all aspects of life: education, health, law, etc.



Today, Nigerian Muslims see our so called independence in 1960 as cosmetic, our republican status in 1963 as window-dressing and our democracy today as a monumental fraud.  This injustice against Muslims must be addressed at the National Conference if this government seeks genuine peace. Christians and Muslims must enjoy equal rights in all fields in a post-National Conference Nigeria. That is why we must invite both groups to tell Nigerians what they want.



The exclusion of Muslims from the pre-National Conference meetings in the South West is part of a massive plan to permanently keep Muslims from the geo-political zone at bay. We decry this attempt as undemocratic, non-participatory and Bohemian. Nigeria’s search for peace must be genuine. It is therefore hypocritical to exclude religion from the theme of the conference.



We are alarmed by the shoddy preparations and the rush. Besides, we wish to warn that a booby trap lies ahead if the National Conference is combined with the 2015 general elections.



In view of the poor publicity for the past two sittings in the South West, we demand that the committee fixes other dates for the sub-region. These dates must be given due publicity in the print and electronic media. A national conference is not a child’s play and cannot be prepared for in secrecy. What is the committee trying to hide?



Professor Ishaq Akintola,

Director,

Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)

08182119714

Saturday, November 9, 2013

PRESS RELEASE: LESSONS IN GOLDEN EAGLETS’ VICTORY

10th November, 2013

PRESS RELEASE:

LESSONS IN GOLDEN EAGLETS’ VICTORY



Nigeria’s Under 17 National Team, the Golden Eaglets, defeated its Mexican counterpart in the final leg of the FIFA U-17 World Cup 2013 on Friday, 8th November, 2013 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The Golden Eaglets thus became the first team ever to win the FIFA U-17 World Cup four times having won it in 1985, 1993, and 2007.  In all, Nigeria scored 26 goals in seven matches and conceded 5 only.



Not only that, the team also won the FIFA Fair Play award for its sportsmanship and approach to the game. The team’s highest goalscorer, Kelechi Iheanacho, emerged as the competition’s most outstanding player by winning the Adidas Golden Ball. He also won the Adidas Silver Boot as the competition’s second highest goalscorer with six goals, one behind the top scorer Valmir Berisha of Sweden. Goalkeeper Dele Alampasu also won the Adidas Golden Glove as the best goalkeeper of the tournament.



These laurels can be attributed to good preparation by the team’s handlers, vision of its leadership, sacrifice from both the handlers and the players and, above all, the spirit of unity among the players.



The outcome of this global tournament has revealed that religion and ethnicity are parochial barometers in choosing who leads Nigeria as well as in assessing their performance. What really matters is delivery, transparency, probity and accountability. If the combinations of Kelechi Ihenacho, Awoniyi, Chidera Ezeh, Dele Alampasu Musa Yahaya, Muhammed the captain, Abdulahi Alfa and goalkeeper can put aside religious and ethnic sentiments, what stops Aso Rock from treating Christians and Muslims equally in all matters?



The fact that the Golden Eaglet team consists of Christians and Muslims, Hausa, Ibo and Yoruba who worked in unison sends a strong and indubitable signal to Nigeria’s religious and traditional leaders, urging them to close ranks.



The young Nigerians who donned the nation’s battle fatigue in Abu Dhabi have demonstrated the fact that unity is what we need to move this country forward. They have also shown us that to achieve unity, there must be social justice, equal rights and rule of law.



It is crystal clear from the outcome of the universal sporting exercise that Nigeria can still get it right if we do it right. We can get it right if we stop putting square pegs in round holes. We must therefore stop the recycling of leadership or its rotation among the capitalist bourgeoisie. This does not necessarily mean forceful seizure of wealth from the rich as posited by the communists. Those who obtain their wealth through legitimate means must be allowed to enjoy the fruits of their labour while they guide the country to the path of greatness using their immense experience in business.



The body language of these young heroes has communicated an important message to Nigerians: that our youths possess great potentials and should be given the opportunity to showcase their various skills in different fields. The feat achieved by these young boys has exposed the hypocrisy of successive Nigerian leadership. It has revealed that Nigeria’s hope lies in its youths.



Yet in order to bring out the best in the young ones, they must be given the best education to meet international best practices. But whereas the United Nations Economic, Social and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) recommends that 26% of the budget of every country should be set aside for education, Nigeria has always fallen tragically short, particularly from the 70s.



The failure to fund the universities properly based on the recommendation of UNESCO has robbed the nation of the much needed manpower to turn around Nigeria’s fortune. It was a great disservice to the young ones. Yet today it is this same oppressed, undernourished, under-funded and highly deprived young ones, the Golden Eaglets, who have lifted the banner of Nigeria to high heavens in far away Abu Dhabi and our leaders had no qualms sending an allegedly overbloated 250-strong Federal Government delegation after the meal was cooked and ready!



This is one meal our leaders cannot beat their chests to claim its preparation. The past and present leaders should therefore bury their heads in shame at the monumental degradation in the education sector and the Federal Government must turn repentant and attend to the needs of the sector with immediate effect.



Professor Ishaq Akintola,

Director,

Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)

08182119714

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

POLICE INVASION OF nPDP MEETING: TIME TO CREATE STATE POLICE


30th October, 2013

PRESS RELEASE:

POLICE INVASION OF nPDP MEETING: TIME TO CREATE STATE POLICE



The Nigeria Police recently invaded the venue of a meeting of the G7 Governors held inside the lodge of one of the governors in Abuja.



This is another disturbing development in the Nigerian political arena. It should also interest all stakeholders in the Nigerian project. It does not matter whether we are politicians or not. Nigerians must watch the style of the ruling party. Whole governors are blocked by the police from entering their lodges. The same police is used to seal up opposition secretariats. Police chiefs withdraw security details of state chief executives and now the opposition is not free to associate or hold meetings.



It all boils down to the ruling party using the police to harass the opposition. Those who have been calling for the creation of state police were right afterall. It has become very glaring that the centre is too powerful, giving credence to the saying that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. The need to create state police formations has now become imperative. There must be balance of power.



It was this type of federal recklessness which led past politicians to call on the army to take over power in this country. The buck stops at Mr. President’s table and we hold him responsible for PDP’s political extremism. From the way and manner this country is being run, we are tempted to believe that if Allah lives in Nigeria, our leaders will attempt to break His window. There is absolute lack of the fear of Allah in the attitude of those in power.



The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) is shocked by the impunity of the ruling party. We are deeply worried that the PDP has failed to learn from history. It adds luster to the aphorism that the only lesson that men learn from history is that men learn nothing from history. If January 15th 1966 is too far in the annals of Nigerian history, what of the recent Egyptian military takeover of power in Egypt?



MURIC is concerned because we know the repercussions of military rule. Or is our memory so short? The features of military rule are very frightening: dictatorship, corruption, lack of accountability, arbitrary arrests, koboko mentality, infringement on fundamental human rights, etc. Our people stress the need to tell the deaf’s son about the excesses of his father so that the latter may eventually hear.



Nigerians must borrow a leaf from the Glorious Qur’an. Chapter 8 verse 25 says, “And fear a tumult which will not affect the culprits alone. And know that Allah is strict in punishment”. It is therefore not this PDP leadership alone that will suffer the consequences of its lawlessness.


MURIC appeals to well-meaning Nigerians and true patriots to call the PDP leadership to order. It was Samuel Butler who said, “Silence is not always tact, and it is tact that is golden, not silence.” The time to speak up is now. We charge the international community to wade in now before this crisis escalates.



Professor Ishaq Akintola,

Director,

Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)

08182119714