Emir of Kano urges legislature, courts, police to protect women, girl-child

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File: HRH Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi II, Sariki and Emir of Kano, during the Opening Ceremony of 34th National Qur'anic Competition, held at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere, Lagos, on Friday 27th December 2019. PHOTO: The DEFENDER.

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The Emir of Kano, Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi II, has called for the protection of women and girl-child by legislature, courts and the police.

He said it is not the place of the traditional rulers and the Islamic scholars to do so other than talk and preach.

The Sarkin Kano, on Thursday in Abuja, said fathers who are too poor to cater for their children should beg for alms themselves and stop sending out their children as Almajiris.

He also recommended the arrest of any parent that sends out a child to beg for alms and called for enactment of laws by state governments to tackle injustices in marriages.

The Emir made the calls at a national conference by Future Assured Initiative, the non-governmental organisation of Aisha Buhari, the First Lady, organised in collaboration with the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

The Emir said no law provides that a man should marry, have children and abandon his responsibility to them, adding that any man that was too poor to take care of his family should go out and beg himself and not send his children.

He said any man who is too poor to take care of his family should go out and beg himself, and not send his children.

According to the traditional ruler, “every day, wives are complaining about their husbands who claim their rights but abandon their responsibilities of marriage; women being divorced with their husbands not taking care of the children and those children ending up on the streets, drugs, political thuggery and violent extremism.

“No law that talks about consent in marriage, the rights of wives and husbands, domestic violence, rights of women divorced, the responsibilities of husbands under divorce situations.

“If a child is found on the streets, is the father that is responsible and can the state hold him accountable? Do you just marry and have children without any responsibilities?

“The reason Allah send His Prophets is that there should be justice in this world. Justice in our relationship with our maker and in our relationship with our fellow human beings.”

On justice for domestic abuse, Sanusi said: “Justice means that everyone is given his rights. If a man takes the privilege of being the head of the family, he takes the responsibilities of being the provider of the family. You cannot take that privilege and a band the responsibilities.

“Is it a fact that a father has the right to force his daughter into a loveless marriage? That you have the right to batter your wife? You have the right to have children and push them to the streets to beg? That when you divorce your wife, you ask her and her children to pack and go back to her father’s house and that is the end?

“I can spend 100 years saying that it is wrong and un-Islamic for a man to beat his wife, but it is the governor and the state House of Assembly that should pass the law. It is the courts and the police that will make sure that the woman gets justice. The scholars and emirs cannot do that.

“So, the problem is these groups of human beings are those who will stand to answer to Allah if there is no justice.

“The traditional and religious leaders have an obligation to ask for justice, but those with the political powers have an obligation to put in place the processes that will make sure that these justices are complied with,” Sanusi added.


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