5th September, 2016
PRESS RELEASE:
WAEC SUPERVISOR ASSAULTS
FEMALE MUSLIM CANDIDATE
A female Muslim candidate writing
the current examination of the West African Examinations Council (WAEC),
Khadijat Eniola Anisere was assaulted by a female supervisor of WAEC at Egan
Grammar School, Igando, Lagos State. The incident occurred while candidates
were taking biology on Friday, 2nd September, 2016 between 9.30 am and
12 noon.
The WAEC supervisor who was shuttling from one center to
the other arrived the center and entered the examination hall where the Muslim
girl was seated among many other candidates, clad in hijab. She approached the
hijabite and ordered her to remove her hijab. Khadijah pleaded that hijab was
her mode of dressing as a Muslim. She further pleaded that she would feel
totally naked if she removed the head cover.
Obviously enraged and determined to enforce her illegal
command, the WAEC supervisor yanked off the hijab from the poor girl’s head.
Khadijah, whose examination was already interrupted, burst into tears. She cried
throughout the rest of the examination period and was unable to continue taking
the examination. The incident was reported by members of the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
at the human rights desk in Igando Police Station by 10 am on Saturday, 3rd
September 2016.
MURIC strongly condemns this wanton assault on an innocent
female Muslim teenager. It is most bizarre, highly barbaric and totally
deplorable.
This is a hate attack and a blatant act of Islamophobia. We
see it as part of a grand design to retard the progress of Muslim youths.
Christian fanatics working in government agencies like WAEC have been
instructed by hate preachers to create bottlenecks for Muslim youths by all
possible means.
Section 38 (i) & (ii) of the 1999 Constitution of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria not only grants freedom of religion but also
stipulates its practice and manifestation. Hijab is therefore a legally
recognized head cover for female Muslims. The supervisor’s order for the removal
of the hijab was unlawful, unconstitutional and therefore ultra vires. The forceful removal of the candidate’s hijab
constitutes assault in legal parlance.
The supervisor’s attack
on Khadijah Anisere is a breach of Section 13 of the Code of Conduct Bureau and
Tribunal Act (1991) which provides ‘’a
public officer shall not do or direct to be done, in abuse of his office, any
act prejudicial to the rights of any person knowing that such act is unlawful
or contrary to any government policy’’
For whereas the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Article 4,
Clause 1 & 2 affirm that “Human beings are inviolable. Every human being
shall be entitled to respect for his life and the integrity of his person”, the
WAEC supervisor chose to derobe the innocent Muslim girl in public.
MURIC demands justice for Khadijah Anisere. Nigerian
Muslims will not fold their arms and watch their daughters dehumanised by Christian
fanatics. WAEC must identify this extremist supervisor and discipline her.
People like her are responsible for series of religious crises that have
resulted in loss of lives and destruction of properties worth billions of
naira. What Nigeria needs most today is peace and stability and our public
institutions cannot afford to create unnecessary tension at this point in time.
We assert that justice is the soul of peace and whoever denies one can never
enjoy the other.
We therefore demand a public statement from WAEC on the
supervisor’s identity and the official reprimand failing which WAEC should
blame itself for the reaction of Muslims. Nigerian Muslims also want to know
what palliative WAEC has in store for the innocent girl who was rudely
disturbed during the biology examination. Will she fail biology?
We also appeal to the Federal Ministry of Education to
restrain examination bodies from imposing anti-Muslim rules on registration
guidelines.
Here lies the real anatomy of terrorism and religious
violence. Fanatical officials use their positions to victimize Muslims everyday
in Nigeria. The natural corollary can only be likened to smoke from fire.
Nonetheless, we appeal to Muslims throughout the country to
remain calm and law abiding as WAEC and the Ministry of Education take steps to
address the matter. We advocate dialogue in place of spontaneous or
premeditated violence. Muslim youths are warned not to take the law into their
hands.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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