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The court refuted
claims that hijab wearing could spark religious disputes
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By Khedr Abdel Baki, IOL
Correspondent
ABUJA, November 20 (IslamOnline.net) –
Nigerian Muslims hailed a court ruling against a decision by the Lagos
state government banning hijab in state schools under claims of
inciting sectarian division in the country.
The verdict deals a serious blow to
continued attempts to ban hijab in Nigeria, especially in southern
areas, Abdul Wahab Baba Nafae, a Muslim activist, told IslamOnline.net
Saturday, November 20.
“Some fanatic Christians have been
resorting to such attempts [to ban hijab] after failing to contain the
growing Islamic tide in Nigeria,” he said.
“They should abandon their provocative
schemes and respect the rule of law. We are only exercising our
constitutional rights.”
The activist recalled that similar legal
actions has been taken in several Nigerian states to ban hijab in
public schools.
Baseless Claim
The Lagos High Court ruled on Thursday,
November 18, that no party or person can force Muslim girls to take
off their hijab which, it maintained, is part and parcel of personal
freedoms.
In October, the Lagos National Institute
of Health and Technology banned Muslim students from entering
classrooms, a decision backed by the state government.
Students Fatimo Abidemi Razak, Titilayo
Sanni, Idiatu Asabi Ayinde and Sunbo Bada challenged the decision with
the high court, asking that the ban be declared illegal and a breach
of their rights.
Judge Olubunmi Oyewole of the High Court
ruled that the ban was a breach of articles 38 and 42 of the Nigerian
constitution.
He further said the institution failed
to prove how hijab could spark a religious conflict.
The judge underscored that the
institute, a public school funded by tax payers and owned by the Lagos
state government, cannot operate outside the provisions of
Constitution.
Refuting arguments that the students
ought to abide by the institute’s regulations expressed in their
admission letters, Oyewole said they did not waive their rights to
their religious beliefs and practice merely because they accepted the
admission letters.
According to official statistics, 55% of
Nigerians are Muslims while 40% are Christians.
However, other estimates indicated that
Muslims make up some 65 percent of the country’s 133 million
population.
Twelve of Nigeria’s 36 states have
gradually applied the provisions of Shari'ah since the return of
democracy to the country in 1999, despite the fierce opposition from
the federal government.
Hijab
Islam sees hijab as an obligatory code
of dress, not a religious symbol displaying one’s affiliations.
The issue of wearing hijab caught world
attention after France adopted
a controversial law banning hijab in public schools, which
came into effect in September.
The decision, branded as “discriminatory”
by the Human Rights Watch (HRW), left many Muslim school girls
tormented between religious obligation and education needs.
In October,
Cennet Doganay, 15,
took off her hijab as she was entering the Louis Pasteur Lycee high
school in Strasbourg, eastern France, only to reveal a bald head.
Source: Islamonline