“We are fighting lawlessness and criminality and not pursuing a policy of discrimination against any group.”
The Nigerian Presidency, in a statement today, July 28, explaining the proscription of Elzakzaky’s Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), also known as Shiites, insisted that their leader cannot be facing charges in the court of law and his supporters are constantly engaged in violent protests, molesting people and inflicting pains on others, which includes taking innocent lives.
“You cannot be in court while at the same time engaging in violent protests, molesting people and inflicting pains on others, which includes taking innocent lives.”
Senior Special Assistant to the President on media and publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, in the statement, said that the proscription of the IMN has nothing to do with banning the larger numbers of peaceful and law abiding Shiites in the country from practicing their religion, “instead, it was to discourage wanton violence, murder and willful destruction of public and private property.
Garba Shehu said that contrary to the claim by IMN that it had been banned from practicing its religion, President Buhari’s administration has not banned Shiites from observing their five daily prayers and going to Mecca to perform the Holy pilgrimage.
He described the position of the Shiites as blatantly false and deceptive, adding that they are deliberately changing the narrative in order to gain sympathy and divert the attention of the world from its terrorist activities, including attacking soldiers, killing policemen and a youth corps member, destroying government ambulances and public property, consistently defying authority of the state.
He said that the banned organization was taken over by extremists who didn’t believe in peaceful protests and instead employed violence and arson, driving fear and undermining the rights of others and constituted authority.
“The Presidency agrees that the constitution protects freedom of worship, but not to the detriment of the society, especially where such freedom harms others, and breaks law and order.
“The Presidency insists that such criminal behavior and disregard for rights of others and human life will not be tolerated by any responsible government, explaining that everywhere in the world protesters operate within legal boundaries and conduct themselves peacefully without molesting others, or engaging in murder and killing of security personnel or destroying public and private property.
“The Presidency regrets that despite all efforts by the government and other well-meaning Nigerians to make the IMN militants to see reason and abandon violence, such appeals fell on deaf ears as they killed, maimed and destroyed willfully, constituting daily nuisance to workers, commuters and other innocent citizens.
“Having defied appeals to operate peacefully, and given their seeming determination to destabilize the country, the government had to act before the situation goes out of control, after admonishing many times over that people should not use religion to perpetuate lawlessness.”