3rd January, 2017
PRESS RELEASE:
LAW
SCHOOL HIJAB IMBROGLIO:
MURIC
SUBMITS MEMORANDUM
The Committee on Judiciary and Justice of the House of
Representatives was mandated on Wednesday 20th December, 2017 to
investigate the circumstances surrounding Law School hijabgate. A law graduate
of the University of Ilorin, AbdulSalaam Firdaus Amasa, was barred from ‘call
to bar’ by the Nigerian Law School. The committee was given two weeks for the
assignment.
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has since dispatched its
memorandum to the committee.
In summary, MURIC’s memorandum which was addressed to the
Chairman of the House Committee on Judiciary and Justice and entitled “Memorandum
in Respect of Call to Bar Case in the School of Law”, affirmed the mandatory nature
of hijab for Muslim women in the Qur’an and restated the provisions of the
Nigerian constitution on freedom of religion and respect for the dignity of the
human person. The memorandum also revealed previous court decisions in favour
of hijab including a Court of Appeal pronouncement confirming the right of
Muslim women to use hijab.
MURIC
appealed to the House of Representatives to “stand up for justice in this
matter of infringement of Allah-given fundamental right of a lady who, having
satisfied all righteousness in the Faculty of Law, University of Ilorin, is
being denied her right to practice the law profession on account of her being a
Muslim”.
The memorandum also
stated that the Law School Hijabgate has brought to the fore the myriad of
persecutions faced by Muslim women because of hijab in various sectors. It adds,
“In the process, thousands of Muslims have been denied international
passports, driving licences and national identity cards while millions have
been disenfranchised during elections. It is a case of mass profiling of
Muslims.”
It added, “We therefore appeal to the House of Representatives as
the voice of the voiceless and the bulwark against oppression and persecution,
to take the bull by the horn by criminalizing the obstruction, denial and
stigmatisation of female Muslim women in hijab while carrying out their civic
responsibilities like obtaining international passport, driving licence,
voters’ registration card, etc.
MURIC concluded by seeking the following reliefs:
1.
immediate ‘call to
bar’ for AbdulSalaam Firdaus Amasa;
2.
a judicial inquiry
into the circumstances surrounding the molestation of Muslim students who were
forced to remove their hijab on that fateful day;
3.
identification and
adequate disciplinary measure (or measures) in respect of the Law School female
lecturer who stepped on the hijab of Firdaus and debased it by using her feet
to rub it on the floor and “kicked it around”;
4.
a review of the code
of dressing in the Nigerian Law School as it affects the ‘manifestation’ of
religious beliefs and
5. a review of the dress
code in all professions where uniforms are used such that female Muslims in
such professions can use suitable hijab along with the uniform.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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