Kano State Hisbah Corps

The Kano State Hisbah Corps is a religious police force in Nigeria's Kano state responsible for the enforcement of Sharia.[1]

History

The Kano State Hisbah Corps was established by the state government in 2003 with the institutionalization of formerly local and privately maintained hisbah security units. [2] Hisbah, which is an Arabic word meaning an act performed for the good of the society, is an Islamic religious concept that calls for "enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong on every Muslim."[3] The Hisbah Corps, which operates under the jurisdiction of a Hisbah Board composed of government officials, secular police officers, and religious leaders, is highly decentralized with local units supervised by committees composed of officials and citizens in the communities in which they operate.[2]

The relationship between the Hisbah Corps and civil police has been sometimes acrimonious. The Nigeria Police Force (NPF), to whom the Hisbah must report crimes, frequently refuse to cooperate in enforcement of religious law.[4] On multiple occasions, NPF officers have arrested Hisbah members for trespassing when the latter have attempted to enter private property to enforce Sharia.[5] And, in 2006, two senior Hisbah officers were detained by federal police and questioned on suspicion they were seeking foreign funding to train militants.[6]

As of 2010 there were approximately 9,000 male and female officers of the Kano State Hisbah Corps.[4]

The Kano State Hisbah court has extended its rule to some Northern States with high population of Muslims in Nigeria. Some regions in States like Kaduna and Kwara now have rules from the court that governs them. The court set up rules that bans ladies from using Mobile phones and sunglasses etc amongst other things listed.

Authority and jurisdiction

The Hisbah Corps does not have authority to execute arrests and officers are armed only with non-lethal weapons for self-defense, such as batons. Hisbah officers who observe violations of Sharia are expected to alert the Nigeria Police Force. Other duties of the Hisbah Corps include arbitrating the voluntary reconciliation of disputes, verbally chastising violators of Sharia, and maintaining order at religious celebrations. Hisbah are also trained to assist with disaster response operations.[2]

Comparison with other vigilante groups

Some observers have compared hisbah activities in Nigeria to vigilante groups that have operated in other parts of the country, partly based on local tradition and partly as a response to failings of the police. They have violated several human rights of Kano residents, including muslims and non-muslims. However, as of 2004, Human Rights Watch was not aware of killings by hisba members, in contrast to other vigilante groups like the Bakassi Boys in the southeast and the Oodua People’s Congress in the southwest of the country, who have committed numerous extrajudicial killings and other abuses.[7] It is also compared to the newly formed Operation Amotekun in the South West of the country.[8]

References

  1. "The enforcement of Shari'a and the role of the hisbah". hrw.org. Human Rights Watch. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  2. Olaniyi, Rasheed (2011). "Hisbah and Sharia Law Enforcement in Metropolitan Kano". Africa Today. 57 (4).
  3. Adamu, Fatima. "Gender, Hisbah and Enforcement of Morality in Shariah Implementing States of Zamafara and Kano in Northern Nigeria". uct.ac.za. African Gender Institute. Archived from the original on 30 June 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  4. "Nigeria's religious police: Out on patrol". The Economist. 2010. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  5. Olaniyi, Rasheed (2005). Community Vigilantes in Metropolitan Nigeria. IFRA. p. 66.
  6. Mehler, Andreas (2007). Africa Yearbook: Politics, Economy and Society South of the Sahara in 2006. Brill Academic. p. 150. ISBN 9004162631.
  7. "The enforcement of Shari'a and the role of the hisbah". Human Rights Watch. 2004.
  8. Adaoyichie, Goodness (15 January 2020). "'Amotekun not illegal... North has Hisbah, Civilian JTF,' South, Middle Belt leaders tackle Malami". Pulse NG. Retrieved 15 January 2020.

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