12th
May, 2025
PRESS
RELEASE:
ORILE AGEGE GENERAL HOSPITAL MOSQUE CRISIS NOW
RESOLVED - MURIC
The
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has announced that the crisis between the Muslim
community and the management of Orile Agege General Hospital has been resolved.
The
announcement was made on Monday, 12th May, 2025 by the Executive Director of
the group, Professor Ishaq Akintola.
He
said:
"The
crisis between the Muslim community and management of Orile Agege General
Hospital has been laid to rest.
"It
will be recalled that there had been tension within the hospital as a result of
the hardline position taken by the Medical Director, Dr. Sola Pitan, against
Muslims in the hospital. This led to complaints reaching our office and the intervention
of MURIC became inevitable (https://independent.ng/muric-raises-alarm-over-threat-by-orile-agege-hospital-md-to-arrest-muslim-staff/)
"As a corollary to this development, the
Muslim Community of Orile Agege General Hospital (OAGHMC) and the leadership of
the Islamic Medical Association of Nigeria (IMAN), Lagos chapter, met the
hospital's MD in an emergency meeting within the hospital premises where the
issue was resolved after the MD soft-pedalled.
Dr.
Saeed Ahmad, Head of the Department of Surgery at the Lagos Hospital, led the
IMAN delegation that attended the meeting which was held on Friday, 9th
May, 2025. He also led the Jumu’ah prayer in the hospital mosque. Henceforth,
Muslim worshippers are free to use the mosque for Salat and other Islamic
activities.
"We
affirm that MURIC is always open to dialogue. We detest crisis and we hardly
complain unless Muslims have been oppressed somewhere. We have a long list of
such disputes resolved through dialogue. Only a few resulted in litigation but
none has led to violence since our establishment in 1994. We justify our motto,
'Dialogue, No Violence', with every intervention. Violence is not in our
DNA.
"That
is why those who try to give MURIC and its Executive Director bad names will
continue to lose. Their allegations are based on sheer bias, sentiment and an
insatiable quest for Islam-bashing.
"We
appeal to workers in the health sector to stick to the ethics of their
profession in the handling of patients and people who visit hospitals for one
thing or the other. Coldness and insolence towards such people are the least
expected of them. They are counterproductive.
"There
have been reports of Muslims, particularly women in hijab being treated with
contempt and disdain within the four walls of government hospitals. This is
both despicable and unacceptable."
#LASG
#OrileAgegeGeneralHospital
#DisputeResolved
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Founder/Executive Director,
Muslim
Rights Concern (MURIC).
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