The worldwide popular Nigerian playwright, Professor Wole Soyinka, has expressed concern about the comment of the Chief Imam of Abuja National Mosque, Professor Ibrahim Maqari Yakub on the death of Deborah Samuel.
The nobel laureate has called for the immediate sack of the Chief Imam, faulting his reaction to the death of Deborah, a female student who was beaten, stoned and burnt to ashes at the College of Education, Sokoto over alleged blasphemy.
While speaking last night at the remembrance of the late former chief of army staff, Lt.-Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, which was organised by his foundation, Soyinka said that the message coming from the Islamic cleric could mislead his followers to take laws in their hands in the name of religion.
He condemned the acts of burning people in the name of religion, as barbaric and called for its end in the country.
Soyinka said, “We have already continued to pay a too high a price for the culture of appeasement and impunity. Let it end now in the name of all those who have served this nation and given their lives for this nation.
‘’But the new generation should also be programmed to aspire to brutish existence below the lowest common denominator of what constitutes human. Surely, that is where any self-respecting nation to draw is defining unbridgeable line’’
“In the name of all, while I’ve given all for all, I demand that Professor Ibrahim Maqari shall be removed from office. It is no longer sufficient for all to claim that Islam is this and that.
“Maqari has implicitly directed his followers to take the law into their own hands in the name of religion, and innovation, besides being beset on all sides by wars, ultra-nationalism, or religious fanaticism.
“That is the message of a supposedly holy man to the youth, to us. His message to a nation embroiled in this madness of multiple incidences.
“The Prophet Muhammad said this or that good example, admit this or that humanistic pronouncement?
“We’ve gone beyond theocratic rhetoric that merely pays lip service to civilized conduct, that all artistic denunciations be backed by affirmative action.
“We have already, and continue to pay too high a price for the culture of appeasement and impunity.
“But the new generation should also be programmed not to aspire to brutish existence below the lowest common denominator of what constitutes humanity.
“Surely, that is where any self-respecting nation should strive to draw a defining unbridgeable line.
“Professor Maqari however, insists, with a handful of others including vocal serving policemen quite recently, that there is no remorse involved in the torture and lynching of a young student on this earth, which we all share to anyone who cares to listen.
While making her opinion on blasphemy known, Hajia Aisha El-Rufai, wife of the Kaduna State governor, said Islam does not support killings in the name of the Prophet
El Rufai said, ‘’Permit me to say that these people are people we should talk about just like another person who robs and kills the other person, just like a pervert Muslim who rapes a three-month-old baby, just like a crazy Christian who rapes a six-year-old girl”.