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Don’t depose Sultan, MURIC warns Sokoto Governor
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As the governor of Sokoto deposed 15 traditional rulers, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has expressed concern over the sour relationship between the governor and the Sultan of Sokoto as well as the rumour of impending dethronement of the Sultan. According to the human rights organization, Nigerian Muslims reject any thought of deposition of the Sultan.
MURIC’s position was articulated in a press statement issued on Monday, 24th June, 2024 by its Founder and Executive Director, Professor Ishaq Akintola.
He said: The governor of Sokoto State, Ahmed Aliyu, deposed 15 traditional rulers on 23rd April 2024. That was two months ago.
“However, feelers in circulation indicate that the governor may descend on the Sultan of Sokoto any moment from now using any of the flimsy excuses used to dethrone the 15 traditional rulers whom he removed earlier
“MURIC advises the governor to look before he leaps. The Sultan’s stool is not only traditional. It is also religious. In the same vein, his jurisdiction goes beyond Sokoto. It covers the whole of Nigeria. He is the spiritual head of all Nigerian Muslims.
“Therefore, any governor who tampers with the stool of the Sultan will have Nigerian Muslims to reckon with because the Sultan combines the office of the Sultan of Sokoto and that of the President General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA).
“Governor Ahmed Aliyu should not force Nigerian Muslims to take a drastically revolutionary measure. Having a traditional ruler as leader has been a condition Nigerian Muslims accepted a long time ago as a necessary weakness in the structure which they have to live with.
“A military governor, Colonel Yakubu Muazu, exposed this soft underbelly when he deposed Sultan Ibrahim Dasuki on 20th April, 1996. Nigerian Muslims will be forced to make a hard decision if Sokoto governors continue to diminish the authority of the Sultan.
“For the avoidance of any doubts, Sultan Muhammad Sa’d Abubakar is not only the Sultan of Sokoto but the Sultan of the Nigerian people. His performance and style of leadership have warmed him into the hearts of Nigerians.
“Nigerian Muslims North and South of the country may be constrained to pick Islamic scholars only as President General of the NSCIA and overall leader of Nigerian Muslims. It will be farewell to the leadership of traditional rulers over the NSCIA and an irreversible departure from Sokoto’s priviledged leadership position. But history will not be kind to Colonel Yakubu Muazu and Ahmed Aliyu for ruining the chances of Sokoto.
“That will make it impossible for any governor to harass or intimidate the leader of Nigerian Muslims. The power and influence of governors over traditional rulers have become absolute and totalitarian in recent time. Nigerian Muslims must be given space to breathe some air of freedom like all other associations.
“Once is happenstance, twice is a coincidence, the third time is enemy action. If the deposition of a Sultan and NSCIA leader happens a second time, Nigerian Muslims will not allow the embarrassment to happen a third time.
“MURIC reiterates its call on the Sokoto State House of Assembly to either repeal or review the state’s chieftaincy laws by adding the phrase ‘except the Sultan of Sokoto’ to Section 6, Cap 26 of the Laws of Northern Nigeria which empowers the state governor to depose the emirs including the Sultan
“We urge Northern elites and Islamic scholars based in the North to intervene before it is too late. This is the time to lobby the Sokoto State House of Assembly and the governor himself. If the chieftaincy laws of Kano State can be repealed within 24 hours, nothing stops that of Sokoto State from being reviewed in favour of immunity for the office of the Sultan in a single day to save Nigerian Muslims from humongous embarrassment.
“It is arbitrary, irrational and condescending for a state governor to possess the power to dethrone the leader of all Muslims in Nigeria when even an ordinary chairman of a local government cannot sack the president of a campus students union. It is unacceptable. Enough is enough.
“In the same manner, it is tactless, reckless, myopic and senselessly audacious for any governor of Sokoto State who has the power to remove the Sultan of Sokoto and head of all Nigerian Muslims to actually use that power. Well, once bitten, twice shy. Nigerian Muslims travelled this road once, under military rule. We will not ply the same road again.”
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NCC hosts 185 girls on ICT industrial excursion
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has supported the Federal Government’s Girls in ICT empowerment initiative by hosting 185 students on an industry excursion.
NCC Director of Public Affairs, Nnenna Ukoha, disclosed this in a statement on Sunday in Abuja.
She said the tour was designed to inspire digital skills development and encourage future careers in technology.
The initiative was championed by the Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy.
The programme aims to equip young Nigerians, particularly girls, with digital knowledge and relevant technology skills.
Ukoha said participants were selected by the ministry from across the country’s geopolitical zones.
She said the students were chosen for a competition promoting digital inclusion and greater participation of girls in Information and Communication Technology (ICT).
According to her, some participants were also drawn from Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) disciplines.
“The visit to the Commission formed part of activities organised by the Ministry under the National Girls in ICT Programme.
“It is an initiative aimed at bridging the gender gap in technology through digital skills, mentorship opportunities and exposure to innovation,” she said.
Ukoha said participants learned about developments in telecommunications from 1886, when colonial authorities established communication facilities for administrative purposes.
She said the students were also introduced to the history of telegraph services linking Lagos with West Africa and Europe through submarine cables.
According to her, the tour highlighted the telecommunications landscape at Independence in 1960.
She said Nigeria then had only 18,724 telephone lines serving an estimated population of about 40 million people.
“The students were also briefed on post-Independence development plans and the operations of the former Department of Posts and Telecommunications.
“They also learned about Nigerian External Telecommunications Ltd. and the establishment of NITEL in 1985,” she said.
Ukoha said NITEL was created to coordinate internal and external telecommunications services across the country.
She noted that a major attraction during the visit was the display of historical artefacts preserved at the NCC Museum.
Among the exhibits were a Post Office Counter and Sorting Racks introduced in Lagos in 1852.
Other artefacts included the Grand ‘T’ Key used in the nineteenth century Lagos Post Office.
The collection also featured leather mail bags from 1863 and Drop Bag fittings from the late twentieth century.
Students viewed a 511A Letter Scale, an Improved Dynamometer Scale, telegram machines and the Teleprinter T100.
Additional exhibits included a Cordless PBX system, Digital Card Phone and other communications equipment.
Speaking during the tour, NCC Executive Vice Chairman, Dr Aminu Maida, said the initiative aligned with the Commission’s digital literacy objectives.
Represented by Director of Research and Development, Babagana Digima, Maida said the museum linked past and present generations.
He said the experience would help young people appreciate the sector’s transformation from analogue systems to the digital age.
According to him, understanding telecommunications history would inspire participants to contribute to future innovation.
Maida said exposing young people to technological advancement was essential for developing leaders for Nigeria’s digital economy.
“The whole idea is to engage the younger generation and show them what communication is all about.
“This museum preserves the history of communications and showcases the evolution from postal services to telegraphy and digital technology.
“We want to spark the curiosity of young people and help them understand how far the sector has progressed.
“When they see the past and the present, they can imagine the future and contribute to shaping it,” he said.
During the tour, NCC officials guided participants through exhibits documenting key milestones in Nigeria’s telecommunications history.
The students also explored the evolution of the communications sector and its contribution to national development.
News
Middle East conflict: Israel Launches Retaliatory Strikes on Iran in renewed violence
Israel has launched airstrikes on Iran in retaliation for waves of missiles fired at its northern regions on Sunday.
The development marked a day of renewed violence in the Middle East after a fragile ceasefire.
Iranian state television reports that the sound of explosions was heard in Isfahan, Karaj, Tabriz and Tehran.
The strikes occurred after Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, IRGC, said it had targeted the Ramat David Airbase in northern Israel with ballistic missile fire on the evening of June 7.
The IRGC claimed that Israel used air-launched ballistic missiles in its attack on Monday morning.
The Israel Defense Forces, IDF, said it identified missiles fired from Iran toward northern Israel and defensive systems are operating to intercept the threat.
“A short while ago, the Israeli Air Force struck military targets belonging to the Iranian terror regime in western and central Iran,” the Israeli military stated.
News
If a Thief Tells You to Go to Court, His Brother Is the Judge — Jonathan
Ex- President Goodluck Jonathan has criticized what he described as a growing culture among some government institutions of dismissing public concerns by directing aggrieved citizens to seek redress in court.
Speaking at a recent public event, Jonathan expressed concern over what he called declining standards in public institutions and the increasing tendency of officials to rely on the judiciary whenever allegations of wrongdoing are raised against them.
The former president cited an East African proverb to illustrate his point, saying, “If a thief tells you to go to court, he knows that his brother is the judge.”
According to Jonathan, the saying reflects public perceptions that some individuals who engage in wrongdoing may have confidence in receiving favorable outcomes through compromised systems.
“We see government institutions doing the wrong thing and telling people to go to court,” Jonathan said. “There is this saying in East Africa that if a thief tells you to go to court, he knows that his brother is the judge.”
His remarks come amid ongoing debates over accountability, transparency, and public trust in government institutions, with critics frequently raising concerns about the handling of political and administrative disputes through the judicial process.
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