Indeed, what goes around comes around! Criticisms and diverse opinions have continued pouring from the public over the recent incident involving a student of the Nigerian Law School, Amasa Firdaus, who insisted on wearing hijab, contrary to the policy of the Council of Legal Education, and as a result, was denied entry into the auditorium for the call-to-bar ceremony. The development created factions in the bar; some emotionally backed the student on account of the fundamental human rights especially Sections 38(1)and 42(1) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, (as amended) which provide for right to religion among others. Others, seemingly in the majority, vehemently objected, perched on the side of the Council insisting that a formal dressing for call-to-bar ceremony is sacrosanct.
The President of the Nigerian Bar Association, A.B. Mahmoud (SAN) in particular received an overdose of criticisms from colleagues for standing for the embattled student, arguing that hijabs are permissible for lawyers in similar convocations overseas.
Parochially, the judgment of the Court of Appeal in 2016 against Lagos State Government presided by Justice A.B. Gumel which affirmed wearing of hijab in public schools would be in favour of the dramatis personae, a judgment which the court never envisaged the decision could one day affect the judiciary. Hence, a great lesson on fallacious decisions and actions. By the appellate court’s verdict, students now have unfettered rights to wear hijabs in public schools that are distinct from missionary schools pursuant to fundamental human rights, and unconsciously, the court set a wrong precedent forgetting that those who live in glass houses do not throw stones. Incidentally, the stones first landed on the bar. It’s therefore indicative that the appellate decision may have to be challenged at the apex court for a clearer position. Who takes the blame? Of course, the judiciary solely created the catastrophe, interestingly, this time against itself.
As a matter of fact, if the blunder is not carefully revised, a religious bigot-practising lawyer may after this episode stand on the appellate decision to appear before a court either in hijab or perhaps, the clergy who are lawyers in their cassocks and hoods. Indeed, this is not a good development for the judiciary.
On the other hand, looking at the quandary holistically, precisely away from the appellate court’s commission or omission, the action taken by the CLE in refusing entry without formal dressing is apt and philosophical. This position is logical on account that the law school is exclusively the training place for practising lawyers under the Nigerian Legal System, and customarily, to practise in Nigeria requires a dressing code before the court unlike in the United Kingdom and the United States of America referred to by the NBA President. The call-to-bar is the final stage for assessment, and therefore logical that students endorsed for practice should appear professionally fit in sync with the ethics of the profession to be presented to the Chief Justice of Nigeria for the needful. As a profession, legal practitioners have stipulated ethics, ethos and etiquette which include a dressing code in the court.
Obviously, subjecting the matter to religion is, disappointedly, completely out of it. This is because the embattled student wasn’t clogged by the Council from practising a religion of choice even in the law school, rather, there was an attempt to allow religion substantially interfere with professional ethics. It is a trite rule that professional bodies established by law have rules and regulations guiding them. In the Bible, for example, it is encoded as a fundamental principle in Matthew 22:21, “Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s; and unto God the things that are God’s”. This was laid down in resolving a similar dilemma among the people on rules to keep.
The judgment of the Appeal Court albeit flawed, nonetheless, a professional body like law alongside the law school cannot competently be included in the category of public schools for freewill dressing and attire. In the primary, secondary and university education, the judgment may manageably survive for some time but unrealistic for the law school that is for vocational training. It is akin to relying on the same fundamental human right to question a management for denying its member of staff entry into a factory without designated dressing pattern.
On the way forward, religious bigots should draw a red line between a profession and religion. The right to practise any religion, though fundamental in the constitution, is clearly not to the extent of overriding professional ethics. Can the two coexist without prejudice? Emphatically yes. Simply, wear all desirable religious apparels and costumes everywhere except during conventions by professional bodies like the call-to-bar-ceremony. This is the marginal note of the apothegm, “Live and let live”. It is equally imperative to note that the freedom guaranteed by fundamental human rights doesn’t accord unrestrained liberty. To belong to a professional body has a price, and this is, on the other hand, where the freedom to belong to associations or professions is determinable by individuals. In Nigeria, to become a practising lawyer, to garb wigs alongside gown is inevitable and the only remedy is to terminate legal studies at the universities as an academic lawyer. But for practising lawyers, professional ethics which include dressing code is unavoidable.
Carl Umegboro, Lagos, umegborocarl@gmail.com(0705 710 1974 SMS only)
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Thanks