Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II AFP |
The Emir of Kano,
Muhammadu Sanusi II, says he is on the verge of proposing a law which will
restrict poor men in the emirate from marrying many wives.
The
Punch report continues:
Sanusi
said this in Abuja on Sunday at the 50th anniversary of the death of Ambasador
Isa Wali, a former Nigerian High Commissioner to Ghana who died on active duty
on February 19, 1967.
The
monarch said he had been able to establish a connection between polygamy,
poverty and terrorism.
Sanusi
said he would ensure that the law would be passed by the Kano State Government
as a way of immortalizing the late Wali who was one of the first northern
elements to advocate gender equality.
He
said, “Those of us in the North have all seen the economic consequences of men
who are not capable of maintaining one wife, marrying four. They end up
producing 20 children, not educating them, leaving them on the streets, and
they end up as thugs and terrorists.
“It
is perhaps a tribute to Mallam Isa that today, as I speak, in the palace in
Kano a sub-committee of scholars, which I set up and has been working for about
a year, is finalising the final sections of a family law we intend to introduce
in Kano which will address some of the issues that Mallam Isa was concerned
about.
“The
law will address what Islam says on marriage, it will outlaw forced marriages,
it will make domestic violence illegal, it will put in conditions that you need
to fulfil before you can marry a second wife, it will spell out the
responsibilities of a father beyond producing a child.
“It
is a big law which covers a whole range of issues from consent to marriage, to
maintenance to divorce, to maintenance of children and inheritance. It will be
the first time in northern Nigeria that a Muslim law on personal status will be
codified.”
Sanusi,
who said there was nothing wrong with polygamy if it was practiced properly,
maintained that women must be given the opportunity to thrive.
The
emir said his late predecessor, Ado Bayero, as well as all the princes in Kano
were trained in Islamic studies by Wali’s grandmother.
He,
therefore, argued that since women were responsible for shaping the lives of
future kings in Kano, they were equally qualified to do greater things.
Also
speaking, the acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, eulogized the late Wali
for challenging social conventions during his time.
According
to Osinbajo, it takes courage to challenge the norm in a conservative society.
He
said Nigerians need men like Wali who have integrity and the audacity to evoke
social change.
Also
speaking, a former military Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon (retd.), praised
Wali for his sterling performance in Ghana while he was the Nigerian High
Commissioner.
Gowon
noted that when the January 15, 1966 coup took place, many of the coup plotters
fled to Ghana where the then Ghanaian President, Kwame Nkrumah, gave them
protection.
He said Wali was one of those who ensured that the coup plotters were deported to Nigeria to face justice.
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