With
regard to federal government’s decision of August 4, 2016, instructing
Nigerian banks to provide forex to the country’s intending Hajj pilgrims
at N197 per Dollar. This follow after the government ordered similar
forex reduction for Christian pilgrims going to Jerusalem at N160 per
Dollar earlier this year. It’s disgusting and bitter to comprehend that
the Buhari Administration of all is meddling in measures that would not
by any means make impact on the well-being of the ordinary citizens and
which could portray the regime as one without focus nor priorities. It’s
also disturbing that at this critical moment of fiscal difficulties in
our nation’s history, a time when the country is heading into recession
and a time when economic hardships bites harder, the government is going
on with an unnecessary subsidy for less than a million pilgrims at the
detriment of about 200 million citizens. This is one insensitivity that
ought to have gone with the insensitive past regimes of corruption and
recklessness. Basically, this decision should not have been taken by a
government such as Buhari’s regime that wants Nigerians to seriously
have faith in it much publicised promise of change.
This
means muslims going on holy pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia this year would
enjoy a lower exchange rate because of President Buhari’s concession and
of course, the same was enjoyed by Christian pilgrims that went to
Israel some months back. The official exchange rate of the naira to
dollar remain N319 while the rate hovered at the parallel market between
N400 and above. This government’s intervention to subsidise the
exchange rate just for religious purposes is highly unacceptable and an
affront to the secularity of the country as Section 10 of the 1999
Constitution declares that “the government of the federation or of a
state shall not adopt any religion as state religion,” therefore any
serious government would take off its hands in religious matters. As
this decision only highlights government failure to understand the real
issues of national importance on which it urgent intervention should be
highly extended to, at a time the nation is faced with monumental
economic crisis and a time when all efforts should be geared toward
conserving foreign exchange and limiting government spending.If there is one sector that need urgently presidential intervention is the power industry not pilgrimage. Nigeria is undoubtedly in it longest period of power shortage in history, which as a result the nation’s epileptic industrial sector continue to fare very low and may lead to a massive job loss as many of these industries may shut down. Just of recent, the government of Nigeria placed a ban on the importation of several items to boost local manufacturing and protect the nation’s currency and conserve foreign exchange. If the federal government could placed ban on importers whose businesses are of relevance to the nation economy, then it has no reason whatsoever to fund pilgrimage which has no relevance to either the people nor their country. President Buhari should have subsidise forex for local manufacturers to import equipments and materials for production instead of given it out to pilgrims.
On
the religious aspect, pilgrimage is mandatory to only the financially
able persons and no compulsion to those unable to conveniently finance
their pilgrimage journey. I don’t know of Christianity but islamically:
before a person is considered ‘able’ to go to Hajj, he must afford to
transport himself to and fro to Mecca. As well, he must worth an amount
of wealth that exceeds his debts if any, (even if they are not due yet,
or if they are pertaining to rights of Allah, such as an unpaid
expiation or Zakah), he must also have appropriate lodging and clothing
for himself, and must have and left at home what he is obligated to
spend on those whom he must support (such as his wife, children, slaves,
poor parents, and all those under his care) from the date of his
departure until the day he will return. In this case, why would any
government subsidise pilgrimage to anybody who is not financially fit to
embark on such a religious journey? An intending pilgrim is religiously
assumed to be ready for pilgrimage both mentally and financially,
therefore, he is assumed to seek no financial assistance from anybody.
The
way and manner in which our governments both past and present are
meddling in religious matters is un-arguably inappropriate. Religion is
and has always been a tool of division in Nigeria, and for the purpose
of national unity, the government must at all times be mindful when
indulging in religious matters within the society. Now that government
has provided forex for Christians and Muslims pilgrims, what does the
government have in plans for adherents of other religions to balance the
score-sheet? Since the funds for these religious jamboree were sourced
from public coffers belonging to all and sundry not only Muslims and
Christians. Nigeria will only enjoy peace, unity, and religious
tolerance only when religion is strictly considered a personal affair.
Whoever wants to go for any religious practice should do so under his
own care while public resources should be spent judiciously to touch the
lives of all, but not in the form of a jamboree that will neither
contribute to the development of the people, nor contribute in nation
building. The effects of this pilgrimage subsidy is that it opened the
door for state governments to replicate at the state and local
government level, they would also follow suit the Federal Government in
spending billions of naira to fund religious activities that add zero
value to the development of the states.
For
President Buhari to get government meddling in religious matters that
would only strengthen the economy of foreign nations, it’s only logical
if he begin to look at the possibility of scrapping the entire Christian
and Muslim pilgrims’ boards, and make sure that his government distance
itself from patronising religious tourism at the expense of the
nation’s economy. Even the Saudi and Israeli governments were dismayed
at how Nigerians and their government are taken pilgrimage above all
things unlike other countries in the world, a reason why Saudi
authorities at a time tried to reduce the number of Nigerians going to
Mecca by proposing a law that any Nigerian who had performed pilgrimage
five times should not be allowed to go again, but the lack of
cooperation they got from Nigerian authorities helped forced this
proposal to collapsed. As a way of strengthening the trust and
confidence in Nigerians that the present day leadership will deliver the
change it promised, President Muhammadu Buhari should desist from using
public wealth to fund religious activities. Instead, he should divert
such billions to revitalise some critical sectors of the economy – job
creation, power, infrastructure, and education to mention just a few. As
only this would make Nigerians believe that the good governance for
which they elected President Buhari for is well on track
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