The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria, HURIWA, has
accused the minister of interior, Abdulrahman Dambazau, a retired army general,
of a breach of section 10 of the Nigerian Constitution for taking directives
from a private religious leader, the Sultan of Sokoto, in adjusting a national
holiday from two to three days.
The group has also carpeted the Nigerian federal government
for creating a considerable degree of uncertainty and causing commotion to
businesses and the private sector by the unilateral and impromptu declaration
of the extension of the public holidays to mark the end of the fasting season
by adherents of the Muslim faith.
In a statement signed jointly by the national co-ordinator,
Emmanuel Onwubiko and the organisation’s national media affairs director,
Zainab Yusuf, HURIWA, said the Nigerian Constitution has clearly provided in
section 10 that no particular religion should be elevated to a status of a
state religion.
Besides, the rights group said it is economically suicidal
for a nation on the brinks of economic recession and comatose for the political
class in power at the centre to arbitrarily create more national holidays which
contribute next to nothing to the growth and advancement of the national
economy.
HURIWA stated that the business community in other parts of
the globe will see the country as economically unstable if the political
leaders are allowed to get away with the political vice and criminality of arbitrarily extending days of national
public holidays at the whims and caprices of certain persons with ulterior
religious sentiments.
HURIWA recalled that in what is interpreted by critical
thinkers as an unprecedented decision in recent years, the federal government
has extended the ongoing Eid-el fitr holiday to Thursday, July 7, making the
holiday lasting for three days.
The government had last week declared Tuesday, July 5 and
Wednesday, July 6, 2016 as public holidays. But the minister of interior,
Abdulrahman Dambazau, in a statement on Tuesday signed by the permanent
secretary of the ministry, BasseyAkpanyung, added Thursday to the two days.
HURIWA strongly faults the aspect of the official government
statement which clearly states that state institutions and officials now take
directives from private leaders of religious bodies when, according to the
statement, the decision followed the directive by the president-general of the
Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, and Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji
Sa’ad Abubakar III, to the effect that the Ramadan fast continues on Tuesday as
a result of the non-sighting of the moon.
The rights group has therefore demanded clear, concise and
with constitutional precision, a presidential explanation to Nigerians on why a
private religious leader who is not part of the democratically elected
structures, recognised by the nation’s grand norm is now the person
tele-guiding the federal government on when and how to declare or modify a
national activity such as the declaration of public holiday which is the
statutory duty of the elected and inaugurated government.
“We are worried that at a time that President Muhammadu
Buhari is accused of appointing and allocating almost 80 percent of all the
strategic military and paramilitary positions to Hausa/Fulani Muslims from the
North, and at a time the entire maritime
and crude oil sector are dominated by appointees by Buhari from his Northern
region, the minister of Interior who recently appointed an entirely Muslim and
Northern heads of agencies under the Interior Affairs ministry is conveying this sinister impression that
Islam is now the official religion,” the human rights writers association said.
“We condemn this
total affront to constitutionalism and we caution this government to tread
softly and stop creating an atmosphere of mutual disaffection and distrust
which may snowball into a national crisis of monumental proportions if
unchecked.
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