15th March, 2018
PRESS RELEASE:
FAILED
PUBLIC HEARING: MURIC SUSPECTS FOUL PLAY
The public hearing organized by the
House Committee on Judiciary and Justice failed to hold for the second time
yesterday, Wednesday 14th March, 2018. Although several Muslim
groups appeared for the purported hearing, they were disappointed as the
chairman of the committee, Hon. Razaq Atunwa, explained that an interlocutory
injunction seeking to stop the hearing had been served on the committee.
The
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) condemns this development. Apart from being
highly provocative, it is saddening, nauseating and appalling. It is an attempt
to manipulate the course of justice, a rape of democracy and a travesty of
justice. But above all, it is an attempt to make a mockery of the legislature.
It will be recalled that the same
committee had slated the hearing for Tuesday, 6th February, 2018 but
even this first hearing was halted few hours to the event because, according to
the committee chairman, “The body of Benchers was to deliberate on the matter
on 8th February”.
MURIC
strongly denounces this delay tactics. Justice delayed is justice denied. The
authors of the injunction are up to sinister objectives. They want to gag
Muslims from airing their own side of the story. They know that the Law School
has erred by depriving Firdaus Amasa her right to call to bar just because she
refused to remove her hijab.
The decision of the committee to
call off yesterday’s public hearing makes a mockery of the principle of the
separation of power. It is another colossal waste of resources and manpower.
The committee places advertisements each time a date is fixed for this public
hearing but ends up doing nothing.
Is this not a hocus pocus? Several
stakeholders travelled to Abuja from distant places like Port Harcourt, Kano,
Lagos, Maiduguri, etc. They had to arrive since Tuesday in order to attend the
10 am public hearing. They wasted money on air tickets and hotel accommodation.
They also wasted man-hour that could otherwise have been used on other
productive ventures and not phantom public hearings.
Getting to the venue per se
was another Herculean task as we had a running battle with National Assembly
policemen who refused to allow entry. Yet we were told that there would be no
public hearing after sitting for almost one hour. It is sad, very sad. The
average Nigerian has lost confidence in the judicial system. Who did this to Nigeria?
MURIC
asserts that the judiciary is Nigeria’s numero uno problem. Get the judiciary
right and everything else will fall into place. Laughable, kindergarten and
contradictory injunctions are granted without proper consideration. A large
number of such injunctions in Nigerian courts are long in imbecility but short
in professionalism. The judiciary appears clumsy and uncoordinated. The
Nigerian Judicial Council is therefore advised to clean up its constituency.
In the light of this ugly development,
we call on the House Committee on Judiciary and Justice to study the 87
memoranda which the committee chairman admitted that it had been submitted to
it with a view to using them to take an informed position on the matter at
stake since there is no guarantee that any future public hearing on it will not
be truncated with another injunction from enemies of justice and haters of
truth.
As we round up, we appeal to Muslims
all over the country to remain calm and law abiding. It is evident that
concerted efforts are being made to provoke them but it behoves them as
followers of the Prophet of peace to shun violence and all acts capable of
breaching public peace.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
No comments:
Post a Comment