A Lagos High Court in Ikeja has fixed September 26 to
deliver judgment in a suit filed by the Muslim Student Association of
Nigeria against the Lagos State Government over the use of Hijab by
female Muslim students in the state’s primary and secondary schools.
Justice Modupe Onyeabo fixed the date after counsel to the students,
Mr Gani Adetola-Kaseem (SAN) and the Lagos State Solicitor-General,
Lawal Pedro (SAN) argued and adopted their written submissions.
Mr Adetola-Kaseem in his arguments in court on Friday maintained that
the essence of wearing Hijab by Muslim females is to prevent them from
tempting people of the opposite sex or being tempted by them and also to
protect their chastity.
The lawyer also insisted that it is mandatory for all Muslims who
have attained puberty to participate fully in the practice of Islam,
including Islamic dressing mode, worship and fasting.
He submitted that from the Islamic point of view, womanhood is
determined not by biological age or marriage but by the time a person
has attained the age of puberty. This age he says varies between
individual. Some females attain puberty as early as the age of nine
years while others attain puberty at age 13 or more.
The lawyer therefore urged the court to grant the application because
the position of the Lagos State Government violates the religious
rights of the applicants and it is the duty of the court to protect
them.
In his response, the counsel to the State Government, Mr Pedro,
argued that the wearing of uniforms in public primary and secondary
schools is for identification of students from different schools in
Lagos and also to encourage a sense of unity, discipline, organisation
and orderliness amongst the schools.
He also submitted that the clamour and demand for the compulsory use
of Hijab on top of the school uniform by Muslim girl students in Lagos
is a recent development.
Two Muslim students, of Atunrashe Junior High School, Surulere, Lagos
State, Miss Asiyat Abdulkareem and Miss Maryam Oyeniyi, had filed the
suit through their fathers – Alhaji Owolabi Abdulkareem and Mr. Suleiman
Oyeniyi.
In the suit, they claimed that the restriction of the use of the Hijab, violates their fundamental human rights.
They also argued that banning female students from using Hijab on or
outside the premises of any educational institution in Lagos State “is
wrongful and unconstitutional”.
The defendants in the suit are the Lagos State Attorney-General and
Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Ade Ipaye; the Commissioner for Education,
Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye; and the Commissioner for Home Affairs and
Culture, Mr. Oyinlomo Danmole.
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