NEWS
Stop bill on hijab, CAN declares to National Assembly
The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has appealed to the leadership of the National Assembly to suspend a bill before the House of Representatives seeking to formalise using hijab in the nation.
According to a statement by the General Secretary of CAN, Joseph Bade Daramola, cautioned that “the bill is ill-timed”.
The Christian association also cautioned that the legalisation of hijab in Nigeria would cause “trouble”.
Rather than directing its focus on legislating wearing of the hijab, CAN called on the lawmakers to tackle insecurity challenges, joblessness, and unequal nomination in the nation.
As indicated by CAN, the bill titled “Religious Discrimination (Prohibition, Prevention) Bill, 2021” is trying to offer a mechanism for imposing specific provisions of the Constitution and other international laws that acknowledges the right of a female to use hijab in both public and private institutions in Nigeria.
The statement partly read, “We wonder what the sponsors of the Bill seeks to gain from it other than to compound the security problem and the wearing of hijab in public and Christian schools. To what extent does this controversial bill seek to promote peace, order and good governance?
“Has dress code become part of the Exclusive Legislative List? While the citizens are expecting the National Assembly to make laws that will address the lopsided appointments, insecurity, unemployment, and economic predicament, our lawmakers are interested in making laws that seek to promote one religion. This is totally unacceptable in a country with multiple religions.
“Candidly speaking, it is not the wearing of hijab that is our problem; it is the legislation of the wearing of it in private schools, especially of the schools whose proprietors have different culture to that of wearing of the hijab. Legislating the wearing of hijab in private schools would lead to the trouble that those who started it may not be able to handle.”
The Christian organisation further requested the government to return missionary schools to their proprietors and stop financing them.
“CAN has been consistently calling on some state governments that are enforcing the wearing of hijab in the public schools to exempt the Christian schools where hijab culture is alien. We are not against the wearing of hijab in public and Islamic schools, but our schools should not be included unless those states are looking for trouble.
“Alternatively, let those state governments return our schools and stop funding them. We are able to manage them. We did not beg the government ab initio to partner with us. It was the government that couldn’t provide enough schools that came in subtly to partner with us but now going another mile to take over completely. Can the government own what they did not spend their money to build?
“We call on all Christians in every legislative house, including the National Assembly, to arise and speak for the Church if they have not compromised their faith for political reasons,” it added.