Ese: don’t mix
criminality with religion, say Soyinka, Falana
•Soyinka speaking at a news
conference in Lagos...yesterday. With him is Falana.
Nobel laureate Prof Wole Soyinka and
activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) yesterday condemned the Federal Government’s
failure to prosecute Senator Ahmed Yerima who allegedly married an Egyptian
girl of 13.
Soyinka said failure to punish such
acts embolden others to engage in them.
He also faulted attempts to justify
Ese Oruru’s abduction and conversion to Islam.
At a joint briefing in Lagos, Soyinka
and Falana said Ese’s abduction was an act of criminality that must not go
unpunished.
Soyinka disagreed with a professor of
Islamic Eschatology and Director of Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), Ishaq
Akintola, who claimed that Islam has no age barrier in marriage.
“I want to ask him (Akintola), who
invoked religion in the first place? What everybody was screaming was that this
was a crime, a criminal act. Who brought religion into a purely criminal act?
People should be very careful when they speak. They should take care not to
worsen an already inexcusable situation by dragging religion into it,” Soyinka
said.
According to the Nobel laureate,
specialists in human physiology had declared that at a certain age, a
girl-child is not fit for sexual intercourse with “a grizzled, horny adult”.
“So, who exactly brings religion into
issues of governance, of constitution, of law? We’re saying that there’s
something higher than the protocols of any religion, and has to be higher
simply because those who inhabit this border called Nigeria belong to more than
one religion.
“There has to be a commonality which
directs our conduct, which organizes our lives. As inadequate as it is, it is
the Constitution.
“For me – I don’t know about you –
the welfare of a child is even more important than money that is stolen. You
can always retrieve the money, but when you damage a child with a fistula,
which ruins a child for life, if you believe in God, you’re committing a crime
against God.
“If you steal money, you commit crime
against the circular society, but when you damage a child because of your own
depravity, you ruin that child for life, you traumatize that child, so don’t
come and tell me that you’re religious and pious.”
Soyinka noted that during the Yerima
child-marriage saga, scholars highlighted tenets from the Quran which proved
Yerima wrong.
“A governor, now senator, boasts that
he has a right to marry and consummated a marriage with a 13-year-old, when
it’s proven that he actually paid the father who was a driver in Egypt, and we
screamed at the time that this was a crime, not only in Nigeria but in a Moslem
country – Egypt; that this was cross-border sex trafficking, in addition to
flouting the laws of this nation and Egypt.
“He took the girl from school and
then announces his right to consummate the marriage – that his religion
permitted him to do so,” Soyinka said.
According to him, acts of impunity
inevitably lead to problems such as Boko Haram.
“When you invoke religion, there are
others who will say: ‘O, you say you are pious, but I am holier than you,
therefore I can interpret that same source the way I want to authorize me to
kill you, your wife, your brothers, your family; because I say you’re not holy
enough and I can prove it.’ That is what happens when we allow people to get
away with impunity based on religion.
“So, let’s take religion out of this.
We’re talking about pure criminality and it is my demand, and will always
remain my demand, that until you make an example of people like Yerima, there
will be thousands of Yunusa, the man who abducted Ese,” Soyinka said.
Soyinka said demanding justice for
Ese does not mean being against Islam.
“I sympathize with his (Akintola’s)
feeling that his religion is under siege. But he should look for other reasons.
He shouldn’t try and suggest that people hate Islam. Don’t say that people are
Islamophobic. That’s rubbish.
“We’re against crimes, defined by the
Constitution, the legal structure that binds us all together, and we say leave
religion out of it. Any religious practice involves a continuous debate. But
when we’re talking about crime please don’t diffuse the subject. When we say
Yerima should be prosecuted, don’t diffuse it,” Soyinka said.
He also faulted the idea that it is
culturally acceptable to marry under-age girls. According to him, culture
changes.
“Culture is not static. It’s dynamic.
It constantly evolves. There are hard-core materials in any culture, but
culture itself, especially the practice, in view of greater knowledge,
discoveries, even as a result of learning from other cultures, we adopt what we
have always considered sacrosanct, because at the bottom of it all, at the
heart of it all, culture is about human beings, about humanity.
“There’s no culture without humanity.
It’s human beings who create culture and who are guided by it and who adapt
them.
“So, when I read anything which
suggests that a culture is sacrosanct, I just wonder on what planet they are
living, because history contradicts this absolutely.”
Falana said under Section 38 (2) of
the 1999 Constitution, no child of school age should be forced to convert to
another religion other than his parents’.
The section says: “No person
attending any place of education shall be required to receive religious
instruction or to take part in or attend any religious ceremony or observance
if such instruction ceremony or observance relates to a religion other than his
own, or religion not approved by his parent or guardian.”
Falana said Ese was attending a
school in Bayelsa State when Yunusa allegedly abducted her to Kano State and
forcefully converted her to Islam without her parents’ approval.
“That is a violation of Section 38 of
the Constitution,” Falana said.
Falana noted that Yunusa’s father had
spoken out that he warned his son not to bring Ese to Kano, adding that when
the Emir learned of it, he directed security agencies to intervene.
“There is a United Nations convention
for the rights of the child. Nigeria as a UN member ratified the convention and
domesticated the law in 2003. Since 2003, we have had the Child’s Right Act.
Under Section 15 of the Act, every child in Nigeria shall be educated at the expense
of the state from primary to junior secondary school.
“For the avoidance of doubt, in 2004,
we also enacted the Compulsory Universal Basic Education Act that has also
imposed a duty on the state to ensure that every child is educated from primary
to junior secondary school.
“In fact, under that law, it is a
criminal offence not to allow your child to be educated. What Yunusa has done
by taking that girl from her school in Yenegoa is a violation of that law.
“About 24 states have adopted the
Child’s Right Act, and under the law, which is applicable in Bayelsa State,
what Yunusa did is purely criminal – kidnapping, forced marriage, rape, sexual
assault on a girl who was 13 last year. Now she has been put in a family way.
You can imagine the danger to the health of that girl.
“That is why all Nigerians must rise
to retrieve all under-age children that have been forced into illegal
marriages. We need a national movement against child marriage in our country,”
Falana said.
Culled from The Nations…………………………………..
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