18th April, 2014
PRESS RELEASE:
NIGERIAN SECURITY AGENTS ARE BIASED AGAINST
MUSLIMS
During a press briefing this week, the spokesperson of the
Nigerian State Security Services (SSS) allegedly called on churches around the
country to be alert and security conscious.
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) takes this call with a pinch
of salt. It exposes
the prejudice in Nigeria’s security circles against Muslim faithfuls. It is unprofessional and highly
unethical for a security outfit of the status of Nigeria’s SSS to focus its
attention on faithfuls of a particular religion. This call is totally out of
place. It has hurt the sensitivity of Muslims who already feel oppressed, marginalized
and unintegrated.
This does not augur well in a multi-religious country like
Nigeria. Security
agents must be seen to be neutral. Events
in the last few years have proved that Muslims have been exposed to danger just
like their Christian counterparts. Muslims have lost more Imams to the misled
Boko Haram marauders than Christians have lost their clerics.
Who are those being massacred in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe today?
How many Christians were among the 43 boarding house students killed by Boko
Haram at the Federal Government College in Yobe State on 25th
February, 2014? How many of the 129 girls abducted by Boko Haram on Monday, 14th
April, 2014 are Christians?
The truth of the matter is that both Christians and Muslims are
victims of the Boko Haram onslaught and the security agencies should treat both
groups equally. Both should be given a sense of belonging. Fighting terrorism
is a collective effort. Our security agencies should not divide Nigerians along
religious lines otherwise the battle will be lost before it begins.
Therefore, instead of calling on churches alone to be
security conscious, the SSS spokesperson should have called on all Nigerians to
be on alert. It
is not people inside churches alone who deserve protection. Afterall, public
places are also being attacked. The Nyanya tragedy of Monday, 14th
April, 2014 is a glaring example. She might lay emphasis on places of worship,
but definitely not churches.
The leadership of Nigerian Muslims came out boldly to call Boko
Haram an evil group. He called on righteous men among the Christians and
Muslims to come together to fight this evil. This is what we should be doing. Leaders
of other Islamic organizations have taken the cue by condemning Boko Haram and
its satanic activities. By their body language, Nigerian security agents seem
to be giving the Muslims and their leaders a rebuff.
Hundreds of Muslims were recently burned in public in Burma. The
killing of Muslims by mobs is still ongoing in the Central African Republic. We have every reason to be alarmed that
Nigerian security agencies are showing this kind of bias particularly at a time
that a Christian occupies Aso Rock.
Are we to assume that this parochial action has the tacit approval of the
Nigerian leader?
Are we actually in the era of a Christian president who
consistently marginalizes Muslims, openly idolizes Christian clerics and dons
the toga of a Christian crusader fighting for the rights of Christian
minorities while depriving the Muslim majority the dividends of democracy and its
Allah-given and fundamental human rights? Is somebody somewhere using
government paraphernalia to repress Muslims?
We remind the SSS and other security agencies that apart from
forming an integral and substantial part of the population of this country, Muslims are also tax-payers and they
contribute their quota to the growth of the economy. They also voted massively for the
government in power today. Therefore Muslims deserve to be protected like their
Christian counterparts. Our rights are our rights.
MURIC charges public office holders to guard their utterances
because the Nigerian project is extremely fragile. We charge the National
Assembly to investigate the mode of recruitment into Nigeria’s security
agencies with a view to ensuring a balance between all religious and ethnic groups.
For the records, we call the attention of the international
community to the growing dehumanization and suppression of the liberty of the
Muslim person and the deliberate attempts to distance Muslims from civic
activities in Nigeria.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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