Chad’s decision to ban women from wearing the Islamic veil, which
came two days after bloody suicide bombings hit the capital, has divided
Muslims but the government defends it as part of an anti-terror
strategy.
“Wearing the burqa must stop immediately from today,”
Prime Minister Kalzeube Pahimi Deubet told religious leaders on
Wednesday, after the twin bombings left 33 people dead and more than 100
others injured in the capital N’Djamena.
Nobody has claimed
responsibility for the attacks, but authorities blame Nigerian jihadist
group Boko Haram, which has carried out many suicide bombings inside
Nigeria in the past six years, sometimes by women who hid explosives
under modest outer garments.
Chad’s army has spearheaded a
regional military effort to fight Boko Haram as the militant sect
extended activities beyond Nigeria’s northeastern borders. After
Monday’s blasts, the Chadian air force bombed Boko Haram positions
inside Nigeria.
Many Muslim women in N’Djamena wear the full-face
veil with just the eyes exposed known as the niqab, which is usually
black. But Deubet outlawed any clothing “where you can only see the
eyes”.
In a country where Muslims make up 53 percent of the
population — with Christians accounting for 35 percent — the ban on the
Islamic veil, including the completely face-covering burqa, has prompted
mixed reactions.
Abdelsadick Djidda, a 45-year-old teacher, said the move was “taken for our safety”.
“Wearing
the burqa doesn’t derive from Chadian culture,” he said. “It comes from
elsewhere. And it’s recommended nowhere in the holy book (the Koran).”
Djidda added: “As a Muslim, I find that people go overboard a little with this camouflage.”‘Seize all burqas on sale’ –
Other Muslims are shocked by the decision, which comes as the holy fasting month of Ramadan gets under way.
Hassan Barka, a mechanic, said he didn’t see the connection between the burqa and terrorism.
“It
isn’t people in burqas who commit attacks and this dress has become
customary for many Chadians,” said Barka, a mechanic. “It is difficult
to implement this decision. Maybe time is needed to spread awareness.”
The
tough prohibition is a first in Africa. Some countries like Tunisia
ordered similar measures before now because of a growing risk of
terrorist attacks, but they were partial and temporary steps.
The
Chadian regime has ordered security forces to “go into the markets and
seize all burqas on sale and burn them”, while warning of arrest and
summary trial for anyone caught dressed in the veil and robe.
“The
Superior Council of Islamic Affairs (CSAI) finds that the government’s
decision is not contrary to the principles of Islam,” influential CSAI
chairman Cheick Hussein Hassan Abakar has ruled.
In a poor nation
that bears deep scars after the bloody inter-faith clashes during a
civil war in 1979-1982, President Idriss Deby Itno has long been wary of
the emergence of extremist movements.
In power since 1990, when
he toppled dictator Hissene Habre — who is set to go on trial in Senegal
for crimes against humanity on July 20 — Deby has repeatedly stressed
that “the secular nature of the state is an essential value”.
– ‘Very tolerant Islam’ –
“We’re
lucky to have very tolerant Islam. The Muslims of Chad are mainly
Sufis, they are pacifists,” said the secretary general of King Faisal
University in N’Djamena, Abakar Walar Modou.
“But Islam can be manipulated. In (the civil war) politicians tried to plunge Christians and Muslims into chaos,” he recalled.
As Boko Haram has gained ground towards N’Djamena, which lies on the
border with a narrow strip of Cameroon that separates it from Nigeria,
the authorities have redoubled their watch over the capital.
The
regime seeks to prevent radical Islam from taking root in Chad, where
conservative Wahhabis and Salafis make up between five and 10 percent of
Muslims, according to the US State Department.
“The Boko Haram phenomenon has thus far had no impact on the population, but the risk is there,” warned Walar Modou.
“The CSAI keeps an extremely close watch over Koranic teachings, preaching in the mosques and even the radio,” he added.
Last
March, authorities dissolved a Salafist association held to be a risk
to law and order. International watchdog Freedom House in 2013 reported
bans on some Islamic charities operating in poor districts.
“Purely
and simply banning an association is no solution,” Walar Modou said.
“You can’t halt an ideology that way, it causes frustration.”
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
NEW HOME, CAR OWNERS EMERGE AS COWLSO ENDS THREE DAY WOMEN'S CONFERENCE.
As the 23rd edition of the National Women's Conference organized by the Committee of Wives of Lagos State Officials (COWLSO), ends today...
-
Participants at the maiden edition of the Fuji Roundtable , powered by Goldberg Lager Beer, from the stable of Nigerian Breweries Plc, hav...
-
Against the background of its commitment to increasing basic knowledge that will correct wrong perceptions about beer, Nigerian Breweries P...
-
Nigeria’s state-run oil firm said the West African nation is on the brink of unearthing major oil reserves in the Lake Chad area, after man...
No comments:
Post a Comment