Egbewole, Ogunwumiju, Otherstask Nigerians On Unity, Religious Tolerance
SPEAKERS at the just- concluded two- day conference on law and religion have called on Nigerians to recognise the importance of the nation’s ethnic and religious diversity and tolerate one another.
Held at the University of Lagos ( UNILAG), Akoka, the event organised by WARCLARS and International Centre for Law and Religion Studies ( ICLRS) in collaboration with the Ikeja and Lagos chapters of the Nigerian Bar Association ( NBA) saw the bar, the bench, and towngown converge for a better society.
Speaking on the theme: “Law and Religion: The Role of the State,” the Vice Chancellor, University of Ilorin, Prof. Wahab Egbewole, said that the state must ensure that its citizens are free to practice their religious beliefs within the ambit of the law.
He observed that every religion and law protect the life of every citizen, adding that no individual must be coerced to a belief system he/ she finds unpersuasive.
The VC said thatadherents of any religion within the state should be protected from disparaging remarks made to coerce them to a secular standpoint.
On her own part, Justice Helen Moronkeji Ogunwumiju of the Supreme Court identified interchange of ideas as a major component to move the society forward and called for a religious tolerance.
The founding coordinator, West African Centre for Law and Religion Studies ( WARCLARS), Prof. Akin Ibidapo- Obe, who noted that religion should be a unifying factor because the tenets of most religions seem to coincide, said: “It is in practice that there are diversities. So, the more understanding faithful have, the less likelihood of conflict. The state must understand this intersection and take proper position.