Laws in Africa target atheists, making it a hostile place for disbelievers
The most severe sentence in secular courts in Nigeria is a two-year prison sentence; in the country’s Islamic courts, active in the predominantly Muslim north, it is death. Sharia law does not apply to non-Muslims without their consent.
Bala grew up a Muslim but became an atheist in 2014. His family quickly sent him to a mental hospital, according to James Ibor, his lawyer. Reappeared in public life, he became president of the Humanist Association of Nigeria two years ago and defended non-religious people on social networks.
Amina Ahmed, wife of Muhammad Mubarak Bala, plays with her son, Sodangi Mubarak, at her home in Abuja, Nigeria.Credit:PA
Prosecutors in the northern state of Kano cited posts on Bala’s popular Facebook account as evidence for indicting him in June 2021 in a secular court. He faces 10 counts, including alleged insults to the Prophet Muhammad and “insulting the religion of Islam, its followers in Kano State, calculated to undermine public order” , according to court documents provided to AP by Bala’s legal team.
âMuslims are about to start fasting for the God who refused to eradicate their poverty despite praying 17 times a day,â read one of the articles cited in the complaint. “How I wish Allah existed (sic).”
Deprived of access to health care and held in solitary confinement, Bala has been forced to “worship the Islamic way”, according to Ibor, and faces a two-year sentence. Prosecutors allege that Bala confessed to the charges while in detention; Ibor said Bala did not have a lawyer present at the time.
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âMubarak was honest with his statements,â Ibor said. “We do not view Mubarak’s messages as inflammatory, offensive or illegal.”
Kano Attorney General Musa Lawan told the AP his agency could not be blamed for Bala’s lengthy detention, as it only took over the prosecution of his case a year after his arrest. .
Nigeria’s patchwork criminal justice and legal systems are notorious for lengthy pre-sentencing detentions. Only 28% of inmates have been tried and convicted of a crime, according to the Nigerian Corrections Service.
Bala has already spent nearly two years in pre-trial detention – the maximum sentence of a secular court for blasphemy. Yet Lawan told the AP, “we will seek the maximum penalty.”
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Infidels often keep a low profile, even in African countries where laws against blasphemy and renouncing religion are not in force or are rarely enforced, such as Malawi in South East Africa.
“Most of them keep their opinions hidden simply because they fear social consequences” such as losing their jobs or losing financial support from their parents, said Wonderful Mkhutche, chair of the Humanists Malawi support group.
A former church deacon, Mkhutche began to question his Christian faith while pursuing studies in theology and religious studies. He continued to attend church services for two years to keep up appearances, but quit in 2013.
Earlier this year, he self-published a book on humanism and politics in Malawi, advocating for the abandonment of government-sanctioned religious acts, such as the national prayers for good rains to help farmers. . While his book gained media attention, he said he was now forced to distribute it himself as many stores do not stock it.
Leo Igwe, who founded the Humanist Association of Nigeria and researched religion at the University of Cape Town, South Africa, agreed that none claiming to be a believer is common.
âLife is miserable,â Igwe said. “They have to live always looking over their shoulders, and they are forced to live in a very dishonest way.”
To counter social isolation, non-Africans have started to connect to social media and create supportive communities, with online humanist groups active in Ghana, Liberia, South Africa, Uganda and Uganda. Zambia, among others.
In Nairobi, a 21-year-old ex-Muslim found the Atheists in Kenya Society on Twitter. The government suspended the group’s legal registration in 2016, saying its activities “have generated great public concern which is detrimental and incompatible with the peace, stability and good order of the republic.” A judge overturned the suspension in 2018.
The woman, who spoke on condition of not being named for fear of being the target of harassment, said the group, which meets online and in person, gives her a safe space to speak out and feel. less alone.
But she remains locked in, fearing violence from her conservative Kenyan-Somali family, trapped in what she has called a “double life” where she maintains a semblance of adherence to the faith at home while removing her hijab when she goes to school.
âIf I pray, I am pretending,â the woman said.
In Nigeria, where Bala is still behind bars, UNICEF and the director of the Auschwitz museum were widely convicted last year, after an Islamic court sentenced a 13-year-old boy to 10 years in prison for âDerogatory remarks towards Allah. âThe sentence was eventually overturned by the secular court.
After 600 days in detention, Ahmed hopes her husband of two years can return home soon, but believes Nigeria could be a dangerous place to build his life. She worries about the emotional effect on their son, born six weeks before Bala’s arrest.
âHe has a lovely son who barely knows him,â she said during a recent visit to Bala prison. âMy neighbors are at home, they are with their husbands and their children. I feel like, ‘Why isn’t mine like them?’ “
PA
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