The
Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, submitted a Bill to his State Assembly on
22nd February, 2016 titled, “A BILL FOR A LAW TO SUBSTITUTE THE
KADUNA STATE RELIGIOUS PRACHING LAW, 1984”. In this write up, I intend do a
quick review of the proposed legislation. The spirit and letter of the bill, its
constitutionality, its practicability and public opposition to it will be my
main focus. In the end I will make suggestions as to the way forward.
Spirit and
letter:
Every law is enacted to achieve a purpose – this is the spirit of the law. The
law itself is written out in appropriate language to convey its spirit – this
is the letter of the law. Law drafters usually strive to capture the spirit in
the letter. Unfortunately, this is not always successfully done. Interpreters are
usually left to their wits to try and identify the spirit intended. They could
apply the spirit of the law and deliver justice, or they could stick rigidly to
the letter of the law and render the law an ass. The Holy Bible puts it this
way; “The letter killeth, but the spirit
giveth life” (2 Corinthians 3:6).
On
the surface of it, the spirit of El-rufai’s Religious Preaching Bill appears to
be to curb the deployment of hate speech by religious preachers, which inflames
and triggers clashes. But I am afraid; the words in which his Bill has been
couched negate that spirit. The letter of his Bill has already aroused negative
passions. The Governor is now the one being accused of stoking the ambers of
religious intolerance.
(1)
Where has legislation ever redefined established religious doctrine? The faithful
are under obligation to practice their faith in line with its laid down dogma no
matter what. (2) Have the Kaduna hate preaching incidents been intra-faith or
inter-faith? If they have been intra-faith, why subject others whose religious
practices do not need such a law? (3) Is the bill fair to assume all Kaduna
State indigenes, and indeed all Nigerians, are either Muslims or Christians and
that they are members of Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI) or Christian Association
of Nigeria (CAN)? Many Nigerians have nothing to do with these two religions
and their umbrella bodies. The proposed legislation is discriminatory to such
Nigerians. (4) In a country whose polity is deeply divided along religious
lines, Christians will be justified to suspect ulterior motives in the Bill. After
all, El Rufai is known to be a passionate Muslim? (5) Were JNI and CAN
consulted first or was their compliance naively presumed? Will these bodies
agree and can they cope if more States adopt the same law?
Constitutionality: S.10 of the 1999 Constitution
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria provides that, “The Government of the
Federation or of a State shall not adopt any religion as State religion.”
Kaduna State violated this provision when it adopted Sharia law as a State religion
in 2001 amidst violent protests against it. The proposed law will infringe more
sections of the Constitution, like S.38 and S.39 which states: S.38(1) “Every person shall be entitled to freedom of
thought, conscience and religion, INCLUDING FREEDOM TO CHANGE HIS RELIGION OR
BELIEF, and freedom (either alone or in community with others, AND IN PUBLIC OR
INPRIVATE) TO MANIFEST AND PROPAGATE his religion or belief in worship, teaching,
practice and observance”(capitalisation mine); S.39(1) “Every person shall be entitled to freedom of
expression, including freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart ideas
and information WITHOUT INTEREFERNCE” (capitalisation mine). Kaduna State will
become the most blatant constitutional violator in the country. As the State’s
legislators consider the Bill, they should think about this. Thisday newspaper
reported Kaduna-based Director of Human Rights Monitor, Barr. Festus Okoye, as
having said that the Bill was an affront on the Nigerian Constitution.
Practicability: A very similar legislation has
been in existence in Kaduna State since 1984, that is, for thirty-two years,
without ever having been used. It has been amended twice – in 1987 and 2003,
yet it remained unusable. El-Rufai’s amendment will be the third and futile
exercise. The proposed legislation is too sensitive for anyone to use. Any case
instituted in court based on it will evoke a lot of religious sentiment. Why
invite avoidable future trouble?
Christians
regularly hold vigils which go on all night just to sing and praise God using loudspeakers,
and NOT PREACHING. Can Kaduna State Christians submit to a law that violates
God’s injunctions to them? Here is what the Bible says: “Praise him with the sound of the trumpet: praise him with the psaltery and harp. Praise him with the timbrel and dance: praise him with stringed instruments and organs. Praise him upon the loud cymbals: praise him upon the high sounding cymbals” (Psalm 150:3,4,5). Again, note that this is normal Christian praise worship, NOT PREACHING. Christians cannot switch off their public address systems and loudspeakers in their large cathedrals just to please a man.
God’s injunctions to them? Here is what the Bible says: “Praise him with the sound of the trumpet: praise him with the psaltery and harp. Praise him with the timbrel and dance: praise him with stringed instruments and organs. Praise him upon the loud cymbals: praise him upon the high sounding cymbals” (Psalm 150:3,4,5). Again, note that this is normal Christian praise worship, NOT PREACHING. Christians cannot switch off their public address systems and loudspeakers in their large cathedrals just to please a man.
Preaching in
Islam is totally different from preaching in Christianity. In Christianity, preaching
means the gentle and persuasive sharing of God’s plan of salvation through faith
in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ ONLY. Hate speech has no
place in Christian preaching because it would destroy the purpose of preaching.
If Muslim preachers tend to use hate speech, then that should be address as an
intra-faith issue and not a general religious thing for all faiths. Moreover,
Christians MUST PREACH because they are commanded by the Lord Jesus Christ to,
“Go ye therefore and teach all nations
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost”
(Matthew 28:19). Again, “The Spirit of
the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach the gospel.”
(Luke 4:18). Again, “And He sent them to
preach the kingdom of God” (Luke 9:2). As earlier quoted, our Constitution
permits preaching even in public places. The Bill is therefore anti-Christian, unconstitutional
and impracticable.
Christians
usually play religious cassettes and compact discs in their cars while driving
whether alone or with friends in the car. The messages they listen to could be
in music form, poetry, direct Bible reading or simply inspirational messages
they want to hear over and over. Does this qualify as public preaching? May be
it does in Islam, but certainly not in Christianity. What will happen to the several
calls to prayers from loudspeakers mounted on mosques between 8:00 pm and 6:00
am?
Christians preach
to their own church members a lot. Members of the public or other churches
don’t have to be invited. For example, the General Overseer of a church that
has branches all over the country might visit Kaduna State once a year to address
only his church Kaduna members. Asking him to obtain a license to work within
his own church members and buildings is most ludicrous and absurd. Non-Kaduna
State Nigerians will be rendered foreigners in their own country. Imagine the
chaos if this law is replicated in all thirty-six States of Nigeria and the FCT
with the 774 Local Governments as the points of filing applications for
Preaching Licenses. El-Rufai himself has said that a few State governors have asked
for copies of his Bill for their consideration and possible enactment.
The proposed
legislation questions the very foundations of our peaceful co-existence in one
country as a multi-religious, multi-ethnic and multi-cultural people. The Bill
also does not recognise the existence of African Traditional Religionists (ATR)
who abound in Kaduna State and other parts of Nigeria. It therefore
discriminates against them.
The Bill
provides that State Sharia and Customary courts shall entertain cases emanating
from reported violations of the new law. However, it fails to elaborate on
this. If a Muslim witnesses a Christian violating the law, should the Muslim report
the Christian to a Sharia court or a Customary court? Shall such cases terminate
at the Sharia Appeal and Customary Appeal Courts or can they reach the Supreme
Court of Nigeria? Finding qualified judges at all these levels will be
herculean and impracticable. Everyone knows that the Sunnis (Darika in the Bill) and the Shiites (Izala in the Bill) do not see eye-to-eye
on quite a few things. Were the two sects consulted and did they agree to
cooperate in this matter?
Opposition: Opposition voices to the Bill from both
Muslims and Christian clergy and ordinary Nigerian citizens are mounting.
Governor El-rufai’s good friend and Senator representing Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani,
is reported to have said that the Bill will lead to religious violence and that
he advised the Governor to withdraw it. The
Kaduna State CAN Secretary, Rev. Sunday Ibrahim, is reported to have said that the
Bill only attempts to unnecessarily duplicate extant laws which are in place to
take care of the issues in question. The Vanguard reported that SA to former
Kaduna Governor Yero, as having said that the Bill is unnecessary and would
strip Muslims of their constitutional rights to practice their religion. He
believes that in Islam, Allah has already licensed his preachers and no other
licensing is required again. The
Vanguard also reported that the Enugu State PFN Chairman, Dr. Godwin Madu, has written
President Buhari asking him to caution El-Rufai as his Bill was capable of
throwing the country into chaos. Prof. Femi Ehinmidu, Chairman, Kaduna State
Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN) said his organisation is opposed to the
proposed legislation in its entirety and will do everything to protect the
rights of Christians to preach. The Catholic Archbishop of Kaduna, Most
Reverend Dr. Matthew Man-Oso Ndagoso asserted that the proposed law as
unnecessary and that there were already laws in place to handle religious
affairs. Rev. Chris Okotie, who is the Chairman of Fresh Democratic Party, has
also advised El-Rufai to backpedal on it because it could adversely affect the
image of his (El-Rufai’s) political party, the APC, as it could cause an
outrage. The Northern Christian Elders’Forum (NCEF) expressed shock at the bill
as it violates Section 38(1) of the 1999 Constitution. The Human Rights
Writers’ Association of Nigeria (HURIWA), through their national officers,
Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko and Zainab Yusuf, cautioned Governor El-Rufai to
amend his leadership style because he could ignite socio-religious warfare in
his State. They said his proposed preaching legislation was unconstitutional
and a threat to democracy and asked his party, the APC, to call him to order.
Conclusion: From the foregoing, we can only conclude
that the proposed legislation is unconstitutional, impracticable and obnoxious
to majority of Nigerians.
Suggestions: I would like to urge all Nigerians not
to shy away from expressing their opinions on the Bill so that Kaduna State legislators
may be guided in their decisions on it. CAN leadership has a major moral
responsibility to articulate the feelings and opinions of its members and make
these known to Kaduna State government. Best of all, His Excellency, Governor
El-Rufai, should save all of us further anguish by withdrawing the Bill
forthwith.
Rev. James Pam,
Faith City Church, Jos.
April 09, 2016
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