14th February, 2018
PRESS RELEASE:
NIGERIAN LAW SCHOOLS PROVOKING
MUSLIMS
Although the dust is yet to settle
on the call to bar hijab saga featuring Amasa Firdaus, the six Nigerian Law
School campuses across the nation may not allow female Muslim students due for
Bar Part II to wear their hijabs during the 2017/2018 First Term Law Dinner,
which started yesterday, Wednesday, 13th February, 2018. The dinners
will run till tomorrow, Thursday, 15th February, 2018.
The
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) warns that any attempt to bar female Muslim law
students who wish to use hijab from doing so is an infringement on Allah-given fundamental
rights of those students as entrenched in Section 38 (i) & (ii) of the 1999
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Already,
MURIC has received reports of a number of female Muslim law students at the
Agbani, Enugu, Lagos and Abuja campuses who are allegedly being threatened with
disciplinary measures should they use the Hijab at the Law Dinner.
We remind authorities of these Law
School campuses of the provisions of Section 42 of the Nigerian Constitution which
prohibits the placing of any citizen under any internally formulated restriction.
We also call attention to Section 13 of the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal
Act (1991) which forbids officials from taking any action “prejudicial to the
rights of any person knowing that such act is unlawful or contrary to any
government policy”
We affirm clearly, emphatically and unequivocally that whatever
emanates from any circular in any Nigerian institution (the Law Schools
included) must comply with the dictates of the Nigerian Constitution which is
the font et origo of all laws, rules, regulations, provisions and directives in
this country.
MURIC warns that certain
campuses of the Nigerian Law Schools are deliberately precipitating crisis by
stereotyping female Muslim students on the issue of hijab. Those who seek to play
God in the lives of Nigerian Muslims are religious fanatics bent on
intimidating, oppressing and persecuting Muslims.
This is a dangerous situation capable of snowballing into
a religious crisis whose consequences no one can predict. The Qur’an affirms
that oppression is worse than killing (Qur’an 2:191). This verse underlines the
gravity of the hijab phenomenon. Female Muslims are being persecuted in order
to give undue advantage to non-Muslims. It is religious apartheid. It is unacceptable.
We will rather be free men in our graves than live like puppets and second
class citizens.
Those who make rules
and regulations impossible to obey make it impossible not to disobey. Law
Schools where anti-Muslim dressing codes are issued in a multi-religious
Nigeria do not belong to decent and accommodating communities of men and women.
While MURIC advocates non-violence in its interventions
(based on its avowed motto, ‘Dialogue, Not Violence’), Nigerian Law Schools
should not wait until radical and anti-dialogue elements hijack the initiative
and start disrupting Law School Dinners. They may even do more. The fact that these
anti-Muslim antics are not attempted anywhere in the core North suggests
tactical conspiracy against Nigerian Muslims by authorities of those Law Schools
where the profiling and persecution of Muslims have become the stock-in-trade.
Finally, we call on the
Federal Government and the National Assembly (particularly the House of
Representatives where the Amasa Firdaus case is still being investigated) to
turn its attention to what is going on in the Law School Dinners across the
country. Muslims are not being violent now but they are being persecuted. Those
who fail to listen to the dialogue group may have cause to regret it sooner or
later.
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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