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Dr
Jonathan Obaje, a delegate representing Diaspora-Asian in the ongoing
national conference and member of the Committee on Religion, has
advocated for the annual auditing of churches’, mosques’, and temples’
accounts.
According to him, religion has to be “protected from
being hijacked by criminals who hide under religion to commit crimes
against gullible innocent citizens.” Hence, he's proposing that the
accounts
and finances of all registered religious organizations,
churches, mosques or temples must be audited annually by special
religion account auditors. And then that the head of the auditors to
these registered religious groups shall be from a different religion.
In
a position paper submitted to the committee and circulated to newsmen,
Dr. Obaje postulates that the following should therefore be made
Religion Crimes punishable by law:
1. Mounting of loud speakers on
churches, mosques and temples which disturb personal and public peace of
other citizens should be prohibited and punishable by law.
2.
Religious buildings located in any community with population density of
more than 1,000 persons per square kilometre should be sound-proof such
that nobody outside the building can hear any sound from inside the
building.
3. The broadcast of religion programs on public media
should be prohibited. Provisions should be made for licensing of
exclusive Religious channels.
4. Religious prayers at official and
public functions should be prohibited. Only the National pledge can be
recited at official and public functions. Public functions, in this
case, is any gathering of a group of persons not for religious
activities and in which there is one or more persons who may not
subscribe to the religion in which the prayer is being conducted.
5.
Obstructions to traffic by any religious group should be prohibited by
law. This shall include, but not limited to, setting up road block,
parking of vehicles on roads near religious buildings, centres, or
activities. This should attract heavy fines or jail terms for key
officials.
6. Religious organizations, groups, centres, churches,
mosques or temples must keep proper register of auditable membership.
Any religious organization, group, centre, church, mosque or temple with
membership of 100 persons and above should be properly registered with
CAC within 12 months of attaining membership of 100 persons.
7. The
accounts and finances of all registered religious organizations, groups,
centres, churches, mosques or temples must be audited annually by a
special religion account auditors. The head of the auditors to any
registered religious organization, group, centre, church, mosque or
temple shall be from a different religion.
8. All funds or monies
donated or accrued must be properly declared and lodged into the bank
account of the religious entity within a week of receiving such monies
or funds. Misused of funds donated or accrued to religious
organizations, groups, centres, churches, mosques or temples should be
made a serious crime. Salaries and allowances of staff of registered
religious organizations, groups, centres, churches, mosques or temples
should be decided by all registered members and made public.
9.
Government sponsorship of religion activities should be prohibited.
Nigerian government and its agents should withdraw from all national and
international religious organizations forthwith.
10. No religious
centre, church, mosque or temples shall be located on the premises of a
government or public institution. Individual or group of individuals
shall however be allowed to perform their private religious rights
within the premises of a government or public institution to the extent
that the rights of other citizens are not compromised, trampled or
violated.
11. Speeches, sermons, preaching and teachings which make
derogatory statement about other religions should be prohibited and
punishable by law. Religious organizations, groups, centres, churches,
mosques or temples should be allowed earn their relevance and respect by
making positive contributions to the community and society and not by
verbal condemnation of other religions.
He concludes by noting that
no multi-cultural, multi-ethnic, multi-religious society or nation like
Nigeria has ever risen to greatness without a legal framework to protect
citizens' rights to religion and the laws to punish misuse of religion.
The diaspora representative posits that Nigeria cannot aspire to
greatness without protecting its moral values from religious criminals.
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