The United States has expressed dissatisfaction at how
Nigerian courts continue to convict citizens of blasphemy, sentence them to
long-term imprisonment and death.
US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, stated this during
the release of the 2020 International Religious Freedom Report this week.
He also said the Nigerian government has not brought anyone
to justice for the “massacre” of members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria
also known as Shiites.
“In Nigeria, courts continue to convict people of blasphemy, sentencing them to long-term imprisonment or even death. Yet the government has still not brought anyone to justice for the military’s massacre of hundreds of Shia Muslims in 2015,” Blinken quoted the report.
He further stressed that religious freedom is a human right
and the freedom is enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
adding that America will continue to defend freedom of faith globally.
“Religious freedom, like every human right, is universal.
All people, everywhere, are entitled to it no matter where they live, what they
believe, or what they don’t believe.
“Religious freedom can’t be fully realised unless other
human rights are respected, and when governments violate their people’s right
to believe and worship freely, it jeopardizes all the others,” the US State
Secretary noted.
Significantly, two of the issues – prosecution for blasphemy
and the Shiites – raised by Blinken have been matters of concern in Nigeria of
late. For instance, the Shiites have for over five years been regularly taking
to the streets particularly in Abuja to demand the release of their leader,
Sheikh Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, and his wife, Zeenat.
The couple has been in the custody of government’s security
agents since December 2015 after a bloody clash between members of the group
and soldiers in the convoy of the former Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur
Buratai, in Zaria, Kaduna State.
Many Shiites members were reportedly killed by soldiers but
the Nigerian Army has since denied such allegation.
On blasphemy, recall that a Facebook
user, Mbarak Bala, was arrested and detained in Kaduna on February 28, 2020 for
alleged blasphemous posts about Islam.
A 35-year-old atheist, Mubarak Bala, had also spent months
in detention without trial for allegedly blaspheming Prophet Muhammed.
A Kano-based musician, Yahaya Sharif-Aminu was also accused
of committing blasphemy against the Prophet in a song he circulated via
WhatsApp in March 2020. He was later sentenced to death by hanging by the Kano
Upper Shari’a Court.
Over the years, many civil society organisations and human
rights activists have condemned the sentencing of people for blasphemy by
courts but there seems to be no end in sight to the matter as some persons have
been burnt to death by mob angered by certain actions termed blasphemous.
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