9th June, 2016,
PRESS RELEASE:
NO TO NYSC CAMP IN
RAMADAN
Authorities of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) 2016/17
Batch A Stream 2 (II) has announced 13th June as the new date of
opening camp.
We of the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) hereby reject this
date because Muslim corpers will still be fasting at that time. It is illegal,
unlawful and unconstitutional for NYSC to hold camp at a time when its Muslim
members will be deprived of their freedom of worship and the liberty to
practice their creed without fear. This planned camp is exclusive,
discriminatory and parochial.
Any Nigerian institution dealing with schedules and
programmes particularly the NYSC whose programmes are of such magnitude is
expected to consider the dates and periods of important festivals, rituals and religious
practices. This should form the core of its logistics. It is our humble opinion
that NYSC headquarters has failed in its strategic planning by allowing its
next camp to clash with the Ramadan period.
What happened to 21st May, 2016 which was the
date earlier picked for the orientation? We do not want to believe that the
shift was deliberately planned to coincide with the Ramadan season with a view
to excluding prospective Muslim corpers.
MURIC is not trying to indulge Muslim youths. Fasting is no
joke and it certainly cannot be combined with the physical challenges which characterize
the NYSC camp. Eligible Muslim graduates will definitely want to be part of the
service but the obstacles standing in their way are gargantuan.
Firstly, morning drills in NYSC camps are known to be rigorous
and the soldiers in charge will not take excuses. Dehydration sets in later in
the day particularly in the hotter regions of Nigeria. Ramadan period is
therefore not the best time to hold NYSC orientation camp.
Secondly, adequate sahuur
(early morning meal taken approximately between 4 am and 5.15 am) cannot be
guaranteed in the NYSC camp. Neither can the futuur (meal taken at sunset to break fast ) be timely as camp
schedules are bound to ignore and subsume this very important period.
Thirdly, attending orientation camp and partaking in the energy-sapping
activities on empty stomach is an indubitable invitation to health crisis. NYSC
may therefore be inviting Muslim corpers to step on landmines in the planned
orientation camp if it holds as presently scheduled.
The fourth issue is the spiritual angle. There is more to
Ramadan than ordinary fasting. That is on the surface. The whole month of
Ramadan is a period of spiritual dedication. There are so many other spiritual
exercises in which Muslims engage, the tafsiir
(exegesis of the Qur’an) session, the taraawih
(late evening supererogatory prayers) and nawaafil
(night supererogatory prayers). Only the deep can call to the deep. All these
cannot be possible in the NYSC camp.
Can this timing be a trap waiting for Muslim corpers who
dare to complain about delays in breaking their fast? A hungry man, they say,
is an angry man. Can NYSC authorities assure the nation that hungry Muslim
corpers will not be constrained to vent their spleen? Can they further assure
us that no Muslim corper will be sanctioned on account of such behavior?
Unlike the Islamophobic climate expected in an NYSC camp organized
in Ramadan, what happens during Ramadan in Muslim-friendly environments is that
both primary and secondary schools close for the day around 2 pm. Lectures in
tertiary institutions stop from 3 pm while civil servants also leave their
offices by 2 pm. If Muslims are not asking the Nigerian government to do this,
its agencies should not become blatant tools of oppression.
Religious crisis is common in Nigeria due to the overzealousness
and insensitivity of some government officials. Official policies in this
country often fail to take our cultural and religious plurality into
consideration.
For the avoidance of doubts, we affirm that fasting is
compulsory for every Muslim adult (Qur’an 2:183) and any obstacle put in the
way of Muslims to make it impossible for them to fast is an encroachment on
their Allah-given fundamental human right and a flagrant violation of Section
38 (I) & (II) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
The clear message we are sending to NYSC officials here is
that the camp planned to begin on 21st May 2016 constitutes a
serious impediment to the religious observation of Muslims. It is exclusive,
sectional and parochial. The planned camp should be put in abeyance for now in
the interest of peace. A stitch in time saves nine.
Muslim youths throughout the country are bitter and furious
at the thought of being disallowed to fast in the month of Ramadan. The best
which NYSC headquarters can do for Nigeria now is to postpone the camp till the
end of Ramadan. This country needs peace and stability to develop. We have had
enough religious crises. NYSC should not stoke another.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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