Saturday, 2 August 2014

TIME TO BID SHEIKH RAUF AREGBESOLA FAREWELL

The good people of Osun State will be going to the polls this Saturday, 9th August, 2014. They will be deciding who the next Governor of their state is. It is their chance to see the back of Sheikh Rauf Aregbesola, the Champion of Islamism in the South-West geopolitical zone of Nigeria. It is time to bid Sheikh Rauf Aregbesola farewell.

No other Yoruba politician has so overtly and unabashedly exhibited his/her religious zealotry like Rauf Aregbesola has done since he mounted the high office of the Executive Governor of Osun State. His religious bigotry is a first in the politics of South-West Nigeria. The revered sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, never allowed religion to rear its head in the politics of Yoruba land throughout his days. In the second republic, Alhaji Lateef Jakande, the Governor of Lagos State at the time, came to be known as “Baba Kekere” as he was widely perceived as the respected elder statesman’s anointed successor as the Leader of the Yoruba. Chief Obafemi Awolowo was a Christian. Alhaji Lateef Jakande is a Muslim. Religion was not issue in the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN).

Unlike the All Progressives Congress (APC) which has shown that Christians are only good enough to hold office in both its Interim National Executive Committee and the newly selected National Executive Committee as Deputies and “Ex-Officio” members while reserving the key positions for Muslims, the Unity Party of Nigeria was open to people of all faiths. I have wondered whether the APC’s choice of its new NEC members was borne out of naivety, insensitivity, arrogance or sheer folly. I guess it is really hard to hide what one is at one’s core.
Sheikh Rauf Aregbesola does not even try to veil his Islamist agenda. The controversy about the use of Hijab by Muslim female students in public schools founded my Christian Missionary organisations is still fresh in our minds. To be fair to the Governor, the issue pre-dated his administration; but it was exacerbated by the ill-conceived Education Policy introduced by the Governor which made turned some single-gender schools into mixed schools and some Muslim groups attempting to impress their religious identity on schools which were originally Christian schools by encouraging Muslim girls to wear veils even though there is no consensus among Muslim scholars as to whether it is actually mandatory for girl-children to do so.

In March, 2013, the Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Osun State Branch, Superior Evangelist Abraham Aladeseye, and the Secretary, Rev. Father Gbenga Ajayi, had a press conference in Osogbo, the state’s capital, during which they drew the world’s attention to the Governor’s Islamic Agenda. They cited several instances of the Governor’s zealotry to prove their case. But most curious was the Governor’s change of the motto of the state. The Christian Association of Nigeria believes that the government might have changed the name of Osun State from “State of the Living Spring” to “State of the Virtuous”, because “Jesus Christ is referred to as the living spring”. No; don’t laugh just yet. Yes; I know it sounds like paranoia to read meanings into a thing as benign as the state’s slogan. But this underscores the level of religious distrust which the Governor of Osun State has needlessly foisted on his people. CAN also pointed to the declaration of a public holiday by the Aregbesola administration to mark Hijra. It noted that “not even in Sokoto, the seat of the caliphate, is Hijra declared a public holiday”. Hijra is the migration of Prophet Mohammed and his followers from Mecca to Medina.

The Governor’s relationship and patronage of the Jama’at Ta’awunil Muslimeen (TAAWUN), a fundamental Islamist group, is curious. TAAWUN has been another subject of controversy. Aregbesola relishes controversy. TAAWUN reportedly provides security for the Governor. The Department of State Security has taken keen interest in the group. Not a few Osun indigenes have expressed fears about the group’s possible linkage with Islamist terrorist groups outside the state. 

Perhaps, the issue which most underscores Aregbesola’s Islamism is his issuance of Shariah-compliant Sukuk Bonds. The “State of Osun” Sukuk Bond was issued in October, 2013. The Sukuk Bond was issued in accordance with enactment of “the Osun State Bonds, Notes and Other Securities Law 2012” under which the Osun Sukuk Company Plc was established. The state raised the sum of N11.4Billion. Interestingly, contrary to the popular belief that Sukuk Bonds are non-interest bearing (interest charges – Riba - are considered haram in Islam and, therefore, forbidden), Osun State’s Sukuk Bond has a fixed rate of return of 14.75%. The yield offered was the same as that which the state paid in 2012 to sell a conventional seven-year bond worth N30billion. Clearly, the motivation to issue the Sukuk Bond was religious not financial. Why borrow funds with a religious connotation at the same rate as you would borrow from the secular financial markets and court needless religious acrimony? 

Anyway, our jihadist Governor was duly rewarded for being the first to issue such a Sukuk in Nigeria, nay, Sub-Saharan Africa. The transaction was given the Deal of the Year Award by Islamic Finance News in February, 2014, in Dubai.

You should read the article by Sultan Sooud Alqassemi which he titled “The Myth of Islamic Finance”. Hear what this highly-respected and committed Muslim scholar, who holds a Masters degree in Global Banking and Finance from the European Business School in London and is a non-resident Fellow at the Dubai School of Government, had to say about Islamic Finance:

One of the latest additions to such urban legends as the Loch Ness monster, UFO’s and environmentally friendly land reclamation is what is now known as Islamic Finance. A new scam that started in the second half of the twentieth century and only really took off in the last three decades. One could wonder why the Islamic world needed 1,400 years to invent such a system. One may also wonder why we never hear of such terms as Christian, Jewish or Hindu Finance?........ Did you ever wonder why in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia which is the cradle of Islam there isn’t one openly Islamic bank? And yet the UAE with 20% of KSA’s population has five such banks, three of them white washed. In KSA when a client goes to open a deposit account banks openly ask her if she wants a “riba account” which means an account that pays interest, the majority of clients decline as it is seen as “morally unacceptable[8]” which leaves the banks to rack in the profits. With deposits approaching $150 Billion in 2006 and little interest charges to pay the clients no wonder they are amongst the most profitable banks in the world. A professor from the Wharton School in the US argued that “it serves little purpose to extend financing with interest charges using a set of tricks that disguise them as something else.[10]” In today’s world, more and more people are looking for salvation, even if it was a trick; in this case salvation got an Islamic disguise.”

You can Sultan read the entire article using this link: 

Shocking?! Yes. And he is a Muslim!

There are constitutional, legal and moral issues which Aregbesola’s Sukuk Bond raises and which must not be ignored especially since Nigeria is still grappling with religious tensions exacerbated by the activities of the Islamist terrorist organization, Boko Haram. Section 10 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria states that “The Government of the Federation or of a State shall not adopt any religion as State Religion”. A Sukuk Bond is issued in compliance with the requirements of Islamic Shariah Law. It is a financial instrument based on the injunctions of a particular religion: Islam. The issuance of a Sukuk Bond by the Osun State Government is an expression of its preference for Islam. This is a fundamental breach of the spirit and letter of the Nigerian Constitution which Aregbesola swore to uphold.
Like the rest of Nigeria, the people of Osun State are multi-religious. The sensibilities of its non-Muslim population must not continue to be taken for granted. The debt-burden of a Sukuk Bond rests on all the people of Osun State; including those who are non-Muslim. Why should non-Muslim Nigerians be compelled to carry the burden of a Sukuk liability? It was wrong for Aregbesola to source loans based on compliance with the religious requirements of Islam when a large number of his constituents do not subscribe to his religion.

Some proponents of Islamic Sukuk have cited the announcement last year by the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, of plans for the United Kingdom to issue a Sukuk Bond as grounds for Nigeria and other states of federation to do the same. The religious atmosphere in the United Kingdom is not comparable with Nigeria’s. In fact, unlike in Nigeria, religion increasingly plays a very little role in the lives of most of the citizens of the U.K. It is erroneous to use the U.K. situation in judging Nigeria. Religious tensions in Nigeria are real and the country remains highly vulnerable to extremist tendencies.

The issuance of the Islamic Sukuk Bond by Osun State deepened the already tense religious situation in the state and our nation. It is utterly reckless for Aregbesola, who should have been working at promoting religious harmony, to have so blatantly used religion for his own personally political ends.

It is time that the people of Osun State put an end to this obtuse bigotry of Sheikh Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. It is time to send him out of the Osun State Government House. No doubt he will be at home amongst the Talibans and ISIS.

God bless Osun State.

Osun di fure!

God bless Nigeria.

Nigeria di fure!

2 comments:

  1. What a shame. He is supposed to be the governor of all. Insanity of the highest order. This guy needs psychiatric evaluation. Only sick people force their beliefs on others. Humans have the free will to decide and judge.

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  2. I was greatly saddened to read the material written by Mr. Egheomhanre Emmanuel Eyieyien urging to vote out the current Governor of Osun State Rauf Aregbesola and vote in Iyiola Omisore.

    Are we as Christians now being urged to support the PDP or what exactly is the message? Reason, is one of the most important contributions of the Gospel to development. From it emerge the practical concepts of fairness and justice for all, especially our enemies. Which is why lynching, even of an intellectual kind is unacceptable.

    Rauf is a devout Muslim but liberal in his approach to other faiths. This is not unusual amongst the Yorubas largely because most families have both Muslim and Christian members. Of his six siblings, only one is a Muslim. The others are Christians. His widowed sister, (her husband died a Christian) is of the RCCG, and her two sons have lived with Rauf for years, insisting they must practice their father's faith. They both attend the RCCG.

    He is a scrupulously honest person, and as Commissioner for Works in Lagos State he left office without a home and no financial comforts. In keeping with that commitment to serve the people with complete fidelity, his major projects have been solely directed at alleviating the suffering and deprivation of his people. The hiring of, now 40,000 unemployed graduates, the provision of free balanced meals for all primary school children, provision of free uniforms, the provision of tablet computers for senior secondary school students containing all their textbooks, past jamb questions etc., monthly stipends to the elderly - all of these in a State that is the third poorest in Federal allocations and currently gets N2.6 billion monthly, a 40 percent reduction from 2013, courtesy of the Federal government.

    When Mr. Eyieyien describes him as "Sheikh" it is clearly to give the impression that he is an Islamic fundamentalist. The facts on the man completely belie this. First, as Commissioner for Works in Lagos State, he built the chapel at the State House Marina. Pastor Adeboye at the opening commended him and remarked that he would be a pastor soon! Within a year of coming into government, he commissioned in Ilesa the Open Heavens Christian Evangelical Arena, a purpose-built facility for evangelism which according to him was to celebrate the icons of the Christian faith who are from Osun namely- the Late Apostle Babalola , the Late Apostle Obadare, Pastor E.A. Adeboye, Pastor W.F Kumuyi and Pastor Mathew Ashimolowo. Today, his government supports the establishment of five Christian universities in Osun: The Redeemers, the Joseph Babalola, Dominion, and Bowen University.

    How about the composition of government in Osun State? You will notice that his critics are never able to say that Christians are marginalized in government, why? Because only Muslims can make that allegation! In the Cabinet of Osun State there are 10 more Christians than Muslims. In addition, Christians head the largest Ministries: Finance, Justice, Education, Health, Environment, Agriculture, Physical Planning, Youth and Sports. The Legislature (House of Assembly), which came into office after he won back his mandate in court in November 2010, has a majority of Christian members – 18 Christians and 8 Muslims.

    A Christian who he appointed heads the State Judiciary. Of over 30 new Permanent Secretaries appointed by him 22 are Christians. If the majority of your cabinet, (including your Attorney-General), your Legislature, Judiciary and top echelon of your civil service are Christians how can such a person have an Islamisation agenda?

    When those of us who are called to serve the poor, the sick, the naked, and the hungry are condemning a man who is doing right by the poor and deprived people he governs, then it is fair to ask what the values in governance we really intend to promote are. We discredit our treasured platforms such as this when we mask our political preferences with a religious veil.

    Prof. Osinbajo, an SAN, and pastor of the RCCG, was former Attorney General in Lagos State.

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