12th
June, 2023
PRESS RELEASE:
MURIC BACKS NEW
LAWS TO PROTECT LAGOS INDIGENES
An Islamic human rights group, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
has backed the move by the Lagos State House of Assembly to make new laws that
would protect indigenes in the state. The Speaker of the Lagos State
House of Assembly, Mudashiru Obasa, revealed on Tuesday, 5th June,
2023 that the state would promulgate laws for the protection of its indigenes.
MURIC voiced support for the new laws in a
statement issued by its Executive Director, Professor Ishaq Akintola, on
Monday, 12th June, 2023.
The statement reads :
“The Speaker of
the Lagos State House of Assembly, Mudashiru
Obasa, revealed on Tuesday, 5th June, 2023 that the state would
promulgate laws for the protection of its indigenes.
“Obasa made reference to the coming laws in his acceptance speech after he was unanimously elected as speaker
of the assembly for the third term. He gave hints that there would be laws and
resolutions in the areas of economy and commerce, property and
titles. He said the programmme may necessitate ‘reversing all that are reversible
to protect the interest of the indigenes’.
“There is nothing strange or new in the new laws which Lagos is
planning to promulgate. The advanced civilisations of the world do it. Britain had
its own taste of the Exclusion Bill in 1679 and 1682 during the reign of
Charles II. America enacted the Exclusion Act in 1882 to protect locals from exploitation
by immigrants.
“Even as recently as February 2023, Glenn Youngkin, the governor of Texas, United
States, signed the Exclusion Bill 147 to bar
citizens of certain countries (China, Russia, North Korea and Iran) from owning agricultural
land or buying real estate in the state (https://edition.cnn.com/2023/02/18/politics/chinese-land-law-texas-virginia-what-matters/index.html).
“Every
society whose indigenes feel threatened take recourse to the law for
protection. What we are saying in essence is that responsible governments have
a duty to protect indigenes wherever and whenever there is any element of existential
threat against their cultural and historical heritage in any form.
“This is why we see nothing new in the new laws which Lagos want to
enact. Already, such protections exist albeit in unwritten practices in several
parts of the country, North, East and West. There are some parts of the country
where non-indigenes cannot buy real estate. What Lagos seeks to do now is to
commit such protective conventions into written laws.
“Every civilized society seeks to
protect its indigenes from the bastardisations of globalization. It is even
considered an abdication of responsibility on the part of the government when
and if it fails to rise to the defence of indigenes of the state.
“Therefore, MURIC supports any legislation
that protects the citizenry, particularly indigenes and the vulnerable in
society. We therefore call on members of the Lagos House of Assembly to join
hands with Speaker Obasa and expedite action on the bill of exclusion and
protection.
“All parts of Nigeria should seek means of
protecting the heritage of indigenes. Every state needs such laws but as usual, Lagos must lead the way for others
to follow. From Lagos to Mokwa, from Port Harcourt to Kaora Namoda, indigenes must
be protected from overbearing hawks who make stupendous wealth on their land,
yet seek to eliminate their ancestral heritage and leave nothing for the
benefit of indigenes.
“We charge the Lagos
State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, to exercise no delay once the Lagos
Assembly passes the bills. Lagos must be
sanitised. Complacency, excessive liberalism, indiscipline and impunity are the
bane of Lagos. Obasa must strike when the iron
is hot.”
#ProtectLagosIndigenes
#Obasa
#LagosHouse
#Sanwo-Olu
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Executive Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC).
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