23rd August,
2019
PRESS
RELEASE:
MURIC TACKLES HURIWA ON APPOINTMENT OF MUSLIMS
The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria
(HURIWA) yesterday criticised the appointment of Muslims as ministers of
Interior and Defence by President Muhammadu Buhari.
However, the Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC) has tackled HURIWA for its stand. MURIC described HURIWA’s
comment as divisive, subjective, emotion-driven and therefore unacceptable. This was
made known to newsmen in a press statement issued on Friday, 23rd
August, 2019 by Professor Ishaq Akintola, Director and Founder of MURIC.
Continuing,
MURIC said, “HURIWA is whipping up religious sentiment and this is least
expected of a ‘secular’ human rights organization. This kind of statement is
capable of dividing HURIWA itself unless the body is telling us that it is an
all-Christian and anti-Muslim organization.
“Human
rights groups and individuals within civil society need to weigh their words.
You cannot afford to be one-sided in matters of religion and ethnicity particularly
in a charged atmosphere like Nigeria. We take serious objection to the
stereotyping of Muslim ministers by HURIWA. Or is the group telling us that
Muslims do not deserve human rights?
“The
last time we checked, there was no single record of HURIWA seeing anything good
in Muslims. HURIWA and the rest of the Nigerian civil society clapped by the
ringside each time the elites stigmatised and persecuted Muslims. Pray, what
did HURIWA say when a whole law graduate was disallowed from being called to
bar over a ridiculous excuse?
“What
has HURIWA or any member of civil society said concerning the denial of
education for innocent Muslim school girls over an ordinary headscarf? Is it
not a manifestation of double standard for a civil society that looks the other
way as Muslims face daily persecution to raise hell and brimstone because
Muslims get what is their right?
“When
did we adopt religious leaning as the standard for picking ministers for a
particular portfolio? When will Nigerians grow up? Merit should be the
criterion, not the church, mosque or shrine.
“We
appeal to Nigerians to allow this government to settle down. The same Buhari
who was accused of being too slow has come up with a ministerial cabinet when
about twenty governors are yet to appoint their commissioners. We also have a
#Revolutionnow group clamouring for forceful change of government when even
that government has not settled down. What yardstick can you use to deny a
student promotion to the next class when no teaching or examination has taken
place? People are just coming up with all sorts of preconceived ideas.
“Our
problem in this country is perception. We urge Nigerians to get rid of retrogressive
perceptions, negative thoughts, ill-will and bad faith. Activism must not be
allergic to appreciation of performance and good governance. To be taken
seriously, members of civil society must not concentrate on fault-finding
alone, we must also find time to commend government when it does something
right.
“Unfortunately
the reverse is the case in this clime. We find it very easy to criticize and condemn
but find it too difficult to appreciate good work. We assert that It is
unrealistic for us to ignore the good works of the Buhari administration in its
first term in spite of the challenges and restrictions.
“We have
ignored the beautiful flowers which surround the house, the superb
architectural design and the marvelous interior decoration to pay attention to the
folded piece of paper lying carelessly on the centre-stool and for this we
condemn the whole house as ‘filthy’.
“Is
it realistic to ignore the modern rail system which is already working in Abuja
and Kaduna while work is nearing completion in several other places? Is it fair
to turn the blind eye on projects like the Second Niger Bridge? What of the
massive infrastructural works like those on federal roads in the East, West and
North? Are they sheer mirage?
“Alhaji Ahmadu
Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto, once remarked that ‘The greatest weapon is truth’
while Shaykh Usman Dan Fodio said ‘Conscience is an open wound, only truth can
heal it’. Heroes and real men do not shy away from recognizing good work and
speaking the truth to a mischievious, belligerent and war-mongering opposition.
“To cap the
edifice, MURIC invites civil society to allow the Buhari administration to
settle down. Human rights groups in particular should speak out only in good
conscience. Dancing to the gallery will compel civil society to hide the truth.
They must realize that they are not under any obligation to please any
opposition. We advise HURIWA not to fall into the temptation of Islam-bashing
as this will only earn the organization the distrust of Muslims throughout the
country. Finally, we charge Nigerians to discountenance perception and to make
merit the standard for the occupation of public office, not religious persuasion.”
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim
Rights Concern (MURIC)
No comments:
Post a Comment