15th
May, 2021
PRESS RELEASE:
MURIC TO FG : BORROW
A LEAF FROM 2021 SALAH HOLIDAY
An Islamic human
rights group, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has called on the Federal
Government (FG) to borrow a leaf from the just concluded 2021 Salah holiday
which marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan. According to the group, this last holiday
taught us a lesson in the prudent management of national holidays as Nigerian
Muslims were only able to enjoy one out of the two days declared as holidays.
MURIC is
therefore advocating reduction in the number of days declared as holidays. The
human rights organisation is also seeking the understanding of religious groups
who are in the habit of engaging in rivalry over the number of days declared as
holidays.
This was made
known in a press statement issued on Saturday, 15th May, 2021 by the
Director of MURIC, Professor Ishaq Akintola.
MURIC said:
“The last Id
al-Fitr holiday has taught us a lesson in careful planning and prudent
management of holidays. This came about because although FG actually declared
two days, Wednesday 12th and Thursday 13th, 2021 as
holidays having speculated that Wednesday would be the Salah day, Ramadan did
not end on Tuesday. It ended on Wednesday. As a result of this, Thursday became
Salah day. This rendered the holiday declared on Wednesday superfluous,
redundant and extraneous.
“The Muslims
ended up enjoying only one day which was the second day (Thursday, 13th
May, 2021). But did heaven fall? No, it didn’t. Neither did the Muslims
register any official complaint because they know that FG had satisfied all
righteousness by declaring two days for them.
“But that may not
be the issue. MURIC is calling the nation’s attention to the lessons inherent
in this incident. First, any religious group which falls victim of this kind of
natural and inadvertent holiday shortfall in future should learn to show
tolerance and understanding instead of threatening hell and brimstone. Secondly,
this incident has taught us that a single day may sometimes be enough as
holiday for our religious festivals.
“It is hightime
we realised that every single holiday comes with a cost. Unfortunately we do
not seem to know this because we are a fun-loving, holiday-grabbing and
merry-making people. Unfortunately we do not count the cost, and that is where
we missed it as a nation.
“This country
enjoys about fifteen (15) holidays annually and loses about N9.74 billion per
annum to public holidays. This humongous amount can provide jobs for thousands
of unemployed Nigerians. It can give us a well-equipped teaching hospital or
build another macadamised dual carriageway in any part of the country.
“There appears
to be a symbiotic relationship between our love for holidays and our culture of
waste. You cannot separate time from
productivity. Time is money and productivity translates to Gross Domestic
Products (GDP). This is the time to choose between laziness and
productivity. The fascinating products of the West which we are enjoying today
were results of hardwork and sacrifice on national scale. Our superfluous
holidays are simply consuming the future of coming generations.
“It is high time
we took a radical look at this angle considering the poor and fragile nature of
our economy. With a 0.11 GDP growth rate and $2,386.90 (2019) per capita income,
it is very doubtful if we can afford the luxury of frivolous holiday
declarations and reveling in the pay-day euphoria of the prodigal son.
“We must tighten
our belts. Holiday matters should be part of restructuring discussions. We can
agree on reduction from two to one day only for religious holidays so long as
they are fairly and equitably distributed. Christmas and the big Salah (Id
al-Kabir) alone should attract two days each. All others should be restricted
to one day each while religious festivals that fall on weekends should attract
no extra day or days.
“The economic
losses arising from our numerous holidays forced the adoption of this policy in
the days of late General Sanni Abacha (rtd) and it worked. Only Allah knows why
we relapsed again. The National Bureau of Statistics should make public the losses
we run per day of every vacation observed in this country. Such information
should be in the print, electronic and social media the day after every
holiday. Perhaps this will enable us to know the value of each vacation and alert
Nigerians to the danger of having too many holidays.
“This advocacy does not amount to double-speak.
While it is true that we have been calling for the declaration of 1st
Muharram (the first day of the Hijrah or Islamic new year) as a public holiday
in parity with January 1st, we believe that our request can still be
accommodated with equity and fairness as government’s focus.”
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC)
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