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    CONSTITUTIONALITY OF ISLAMIC BANKING IN NIGERIA

    BY:

    ABDULQADIR IBRAHIM ABIKAN (Ph. D)Lecturer, Department of Islamic Law, Fculty of Law, Univeristy of Ilorin; Solicitor and

    Advocate, Supreme Court of Nigeria

    Published in:

    Contemporary Issues in Islamic Jurisprudence

    A book published in honour of the Chief Justice of Nigeria

    Honourable Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi

    By

    Rawel Fortune Resources, Benin.

    2009

    Chapter 7, Pages 94-121

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    CONSTITUTIONALITY OF ISLAMIC BANKING IN NIGERIA

    By

    AbdulQadir Ibrahim Abikan Ph. D.*

    1.0 Abstract

    Nigeria has a unique approach to the issue of constitutionalism having regards to its

    geographical, ethnic and religious composition. Attempt has always been made to thread the

    path of sensitive balancing and even-handedness on every occasion of its constitutional

    development. The method adopted is inclusiveness, accommodating every interest group as far as

    the collective interests of the groups as a sovereign nation would permit, hence the issues of legal

    pluralism, federal character and religion became pronounced. However, the constitutional

    provisions relating to these issues, especially religion has remained the most controversial. As

    efforts to establish Islamic banking system in Nigeria is reaching approval stage, it isappropriate to examine the extent of its accommodation by the constitution and that is the focus

    of this paper.

    Key words:Constitutionality, Islamic, Banking System, Nigeria.

    2.0 Introduction

    Following the 1804 Sheikh Usman Dan Fodiyos (hereinafter referred to as the Sheikh) Jihad1

    and the consequent establishment of Sokoto Caliphate, the hitherto war-torn Hausa states2

    * LL.B, B.L., L.L.M., PhD., Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Ilorin, Nigeria.

    1Jihad, literally translated to strive in the cause of Allah, is the term used to denote a religious duty imposed on

    Muslims to proclaim the word of Allah and spread Islam with their wealth and lives and struggle against Allahs

    enemies, see Muhammad Abdul Raf al-Manw, Al-Tarf, (Beirut: Dr Al-Fikr, 1410H), 707.

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    constituting the present northern Nigeria and beyond were brought under an Islamic way of life

    and system of government. The system popularly referred to a Sokoto Caliphate lasted for a

    century, 1804-1903. However, the incursion of the British colonialists into the territory and its

    rule that lasted between 1862 and 1960 foisted the western socio-political, legal and economic

    (including banking) systems on the people of the country. The colonial rule and its various

    systems were backed by laws and these laws have been the instrument used by the successive

    governments to sustain the western ways even after independence.

    Between 1903, when the colonialists eventually took over what was left of the Sokoto

    caliphate by the defeat of the latters army, and the nations independence in 1960, virtually all

    the elements of Islam found in the system had been uprooted or transformed. Fortunately, what

    they were able to transform were official legal and, by necessary extension, political and

    economic systems. The unofficial ones that the Muslims learn, imbibe and apply to themselves

    on a daily basis at home and in the market place, remained in the books, committed to their hearts

    and continued to prick their conscience.3 This is, most probably, the explanation for the incessant

    and increasing agitation of Nigerian Muslims for real independence to apply full Islamic law in

    their affairs.

    At present, Nigerian Muslims are taking up the challenges of liberating themselves from the

    shackles of the western socio-economic, political and ideological enslavement. Several efforts are

    being made to ensure recognition by virtually all the past and the present Nigerian Constitutions

    of full application of Sharah which include the Islamic banking system. In 1991, Banks and

    2These consisted of part of old Sudan and Borno empire, it stretched across a greater part of the Savannah region of

    West Africa, between Lake Chad in the east and middle Nigeria in the west and formed the greater part of the present

    northern Nigeria.

    3See Yadudu, A. H., Colonialism and the transformation of Islamic Law in the northern states of Nigeria, No. 32,

    (1992), Journal of Legal Pluralism, 135.

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    other Financial Institutions Decree (BOFID) was promulgated for the hitherto hostile banking

    laws to pave ways for the establishment of profit and loss sharing (PLS) banking. Sequel to this,

    two existing conventional banks were given provisional license in 1992, to operate interest free

    banking but nothing was heard of it again until 1999, when Habib Nigeria Bank Limited started

    her interest-free banking window.

    In this paper, we shall be considering the extent to which the establishment and operations of

    Islamic banking system can be accommodated under the Constitution of the Federal Republic of

    Nigeria (CFRN), 1999. To this end, evolution of banking system in Nigeria vis--vis the

    accommodation of Islamic banking by the banking laws was examined. An attempt is also made

    to examine the correlation between the constitutionally enshrined fundamental human right and

    Islamic banking in Nigeria. The intricacies of law making processes under the Nigerian

    constitution as it affects Islamic banking were looked into. Finally, a review of the constitutional

    debate on Islamic law in Nigeria as it relates to Islamic banking was made.

    3.0 Evolution of banking system in Nigeria

    In the pre-colonial Nigeria, especially within the caliphate, there were various means by which

    business capitals were generated. Practice of money lending was evidenced in Sokkwwato

    Township as far back as 1903.4

    Credit facility was also given in form of goods being sold by

    traders who paid the principal sum with a mark-up or share of profit, only after sale. Individuals

    bound by common interest also pooled their resources together to form partnership at a

    predetermined share of profit or loss.5 All these activities which were practiced under a strict

    4See Abubakar, S., Birnin Shehu-the city of Sokoto: A social and economic history C.1809-1903 , (PhD Thesis,

    Ahmadu Bello University Zaria, 1982), 114.5

    See Malami, U. H., Economic Principles and Practices of the Sokoto Caliphate, (Sokoto: The Institute of IslamicScience, 1998), p. 99.

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    rib-free policy of the caliphate6 and continued long after the evolution of the conventional

    banks are what an Islamic bank would set out to do today.

    A case was reported of a successful Hausa business man in the 1930s-40s, Al-hajj al-Hassan,

    who used to find outlets for surplus capital. He advanced money to young men of sound business

    acumen requesting them to pay to him half their profit, or less or none at times, if no profit was

    made. When he eventually banked with the conventional banks, he was reputed to be one of the

    gilded men of Kano who for religious reasons stipulated that their deposit account shall be non-

    interest bearing but would only receive good customer gift each year if given.7

    Of the various activities relating to those offered by banks carried out in the caliphate only

    that ofbait al-ml (Islamic treasury) was institutional. Although, there is no clear evidence of

    how the institution was ran in the caliphate except in the area of collection and distribution of

    zakh, which in itself is an act of financial intermediation, yet is was confirmed that the

    institution was not only existent but also properly administered.8

    This, coupled with the trend of

    development in the caliphate, make it safe to suggest that it would have performed many

    functions of especially contemporary central banks. The fact that the status of shakhiyyah

    itibriyyah (juristic artificial personality) accorded bait al-ml is gaining wide acceptance

    among the contemporary scholars9

    lend credence to this proposition. The status makes bait al-

    6See Trimingham, J.S., Islam in West Africa, (London: Oxford University Press, 1959), p. 194.

    7Ibid.

    8See Anderson, J. D. N., Islamic Law in Africa, (London: Frank Cass, 1955), p. 216.

    9Muhammad al-Jund, Mumalt al-briah f al-sharah al-Islmiyah, (Cairo: Dr al-Nahah 1988), 194;

    although Nyazee is of the view that the past Muslim jurists did not acknowledge the concept in Islamic law and insist

    that certain areas of the Islamic Law of contract, uddand constitutional law with which the concept would clashwould need to be sorted out before it could be admitted, see Nyazee, I. A. K., Islamic Jurisprudence, (Islamabad:International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT), 2003), 116-117.

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    ml an entity with perpetual succession, right to own property, to sue and be sued, responsibility

    to discharge obligations and powers to lend and borrow money.

    All the same, the traditional way of saving surplus capital was predominant before and long

    after the colonial incursion. The process was to stock cowry shells10 in guard shaped clay pot; dig

    the ground and burry the pot therein putting a mark on that spot to ensure identification for

    withdrawal. This method was also applied to the coin currency introduced by the colonialists

    albeitwith introduction of spreading yam flour on each layer of the money to avoid corrosion. 11

    In other parts of the country too, activities similar to those performed by the present day banks

    like lending, safe deposit, guaranteeing, and agency function in respect of sales were carried out

    before the colonialists intervention, but they were not coordinated as banking business of the

    present.

    Banking in the conventional way was ushered into the Nigerian economic system with the

    establishment in 1894 of the Bank of British West Africa (BBWA) later known as Standard Bank

    and now First Bank of Nigeria Plc.12 The Anglo-Africa Bank which later became Bank of

    Nigeria was established in 1899. These were later joined by the Colonial bank in 1917 13 and

    British and French Bank, now United Bank for Africa in 1948. The setup clearly shows the

    10Cowries took dominant position among the commodities used as money throughout 19

    thcentury in the present

    Nigeria; it is a tiny white hard shell of unclear origin but was believed, especially among the Yorubas, to be in

    abundance in Benin Lands than any other part; this belief attracted a popular usage thus: Ko`i tiirieru oni`Ado l`ohunot`aafun expressing the irony of a person who has not acquired slave, yet insisting on selling it toAdo (people of Edo Land in Benin who had more cowries to pay), Alhaj Yusuf Muhammad Mukhtar, interviewed on

    behalf of the researcher by Folorusho, A.H. Esq., Ilorin, Kwara state-Nigeria, 10 July, 2004.

    11Alhaj Abdulkadir Oba Aremu, Interview on behalf of the researcher by Folorunsho A.H. Esq., Ilorin, Kwara state-

    Nigeria, 11 July, 2004.

    12This bank was the principal importer of currency from the British Treasury until West Africa Currency Board was

    established in 1912, when it was yet appointed the sole agent of the Board in Nigeria, see Danjuma, N., The BankersLiability, (Ibadan: Heinemann Educational Books (Nig.) Plc., 1993), 2 and 20.

    13This bank later became Barclays Bank in 1925 and is now the Union Bank of Nigeria Plc.

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    monopoly of the banking system by foreign banks whose main concerns were to serve the

    expatriates and the colonial interests.14

    The spirited attempt made by the indigenous entrepreneur cum patriots to break the foreign

    banks monopoly resulted in proliferation of establishment of locally-owned banks.15 There was

    neither financing requirement nor regulations to restrict and control establishment and operation

    of banks. The few operating indigenous banks were discriminately suffocated out of business.

    The situation caused some reactions from the nationalists and resulted in the enactment of the

    first Banking Ordinance in 1952, to regulate banking operations. Further agitations against the

    discrimination of the foreign banks resulted in the draft of CBN Ordinance and Banking Acts in

    1958.16

    In 1991, Central Bank of Nigeria Decree No. 24 and Banks and other Financial Institutions

    Decree No. 25 were promulgated. The thrust of their promulgation was to bring the new banks

    and other Financial Institutions emerging as a result of 1987 financial liberalization and

    deregulation under control. The two Decrees were amended by Decrees No. 3 & 4 of 1997

    respectively; only to remove the limited autonomy granted the CBN by the 1991 Decrees. The

    two Decrees were further amended by Decrees No. 37 & 38 of 1998 and Decrees No. 41 and 40

    of 1999 respectively.17

    If anything was constant in the activities of the conventional banks since

    14Igweke, K. I., Law of Banking and Negotiable Instruments, (Onitsha: Africana-Fep Publishers Ltd., 1991), 1.

    15By 1914, indigenous banks started springing up with the establishment of Industrial and Commercial Bank,

    Nigerian Merchant Bank in 1931, National Bank of Nigeria in 1933, Agbonmogbe Bank and Nigerian Penny Bank in

    1945, African Continental Bank and the Nigerian Farmers and Commercial Bank in 1947, see Danjuma, n. 12 at 3-4;seven and nine other indigenous Banks were established in 1951 and 1952 respectively, see Central Bank of Nigeria Economic and Financial Review, vol. 6, No. 1, (June, 1968).

    16These latter legislations have variously gone through amendments and repeals that crystallised in consolidated

    statutes, the CBN Act (cap. 47) and Banking Act (cap. 28) both compiled in the Laws of the Federation of Nigeria

    (LFN) 1990.

    17The latest amendment to the CBN law is in CBN Act, 2007 while BOFID is now codified as Banks and other

    Financial Institutions (BOFIA) Act, Chapter B3, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

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    the colonial time to date, it is no other than the charges and payment of interest by both the

    central and the commercial banks on all deposits and loans. In fact before 1991, it was not

    permissible to operate banking business in Nigeria without taking or charging interest.

    That was not all, since its attainment of independence in 1960 the nations economy has

    remained tied to the apron string of the colonialists through interest system. This was ensured by

    contracting on behalf of Nigeria, an external interest based debt of USD28 million for railway

    construction in 1958. The interest on this loan has being the means of siphoning the nations

    abundant resources.18

    4.0 Islamic Banking as a religious duty for Muslims

    The various form of transactions undertaken by conventional banks fall under one or the other

    types of economic transactions as broadly classified under the Islamic law. Under the

    classification, transactions are either uqd al-muwat (contracts of exchange) or uqd al-

    tabrut (gratuitous contracts) or uqd al-amnt (trust based contracts). 19 Thus, we find

    contracts such as buy (sales), shirkah (partnership), ijrah (lease or tenancy), rahn (mortgage),

    waklah (agency), awlah (assignment), and sul(reconciliation) falling under al-muawat.

    Contracts of waqf (endowment),20qar (loan), hibah (gift), kaflah (guarantee) and waiyyah

    18As of year 2000, the nation had debt (interest) service obligation of USD4 billion per annum See, CBN, Nigerian

    external debt, , (accessed 8 September, 2004); see

    also, Meera, A. K. M., The Theft of Nations: Returning to Gold, (Malaysia: Pelanduk Publications, 2004), 33.19See Al-Zarqa, Mustapha Ahmad, Al-Madkhal Al-Fiqhiy Al-m, (Damascus: Mabaah Alf Bai Al-Adb, 1967),

    vol. 1, 578; see also, Abdussalam, I. O., Ahkm Al-Shurt Al-Mustahdathah f uqd Al-Mliyyah: Dirsah

    Tasliyyah, (Ph. D Thesis, IIUM, 2005), 36-37.

    20Waqf is an Islamic Institution whereby the founder relinquishes his ownership of real property which belongs,

    henceforth, to Allah (swt), and dedicates, before his death, the income or usufruct of the property to some pious orcharitable purpose in perpetuity, see Muhammad AbdulRauf al-Manaw, Al-Taarf, (Beirut: Dr al-Fikr, 1989), 731,see also, Ali Ibn Muhammad al-Jurjn, Al-Tarft, (Beirut: Dr al-Kitb al-Arab, 1984), 328.

    http://www.cenbank.org/paymentsystems/externa_debt.htmhttp://www.cenbank.org/paymentsystems/externa_debt.htmhttp://www.cenbank.org/paymentsystems/externa_debt.htm
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    (testament) are categorised under al-tabrut. And contracts like al-tawliyyah (cost price sale),

    al-waah (less-cost sale) and al-wadah (deposit) are classified under al-amnt, amongst

    others.21

    The conventional banks services include accepting all forms of deposit, financing, issuing

    letter of credit, foreign exchange transactions, local and overseas guarantees, renting of safe,

    accepting and servicing of certificates and shares, investment trusteeship and accepting

    subscriptions in companies. The general principle governing transactions under the Islamic law is

    permissibility. This is summarised by the Muslim jurists in the following jurisprudential maxim:

    22

    The basic presumption is that all transactions are permissible unless they are prohibited by a

    text.

    With this presumption, one would almost risk the conclusion that all the above mentioned

    banking transactions are permitted. However, the objections raised against the practices of the

    conventional banks stem from the fact that the substantive transactions of the banks, i.e.

    accepting deposits and advancing loans are founded and heavily rely on the exceptions to the

    general principle. One of these exceptions is couched in the prohibition of wrongful devouring of

    property23

    which the Quranic exegetes have linked to rib (usury), maisir(gambling) and gharar

    (hazardous transactions). 24 Also, no attention is paid to whether or not the banks other

    21See Abdussalam, n. 19, p. 38.

    22See Ibn Taymiyyah, Taqi al-Din Ahmad, Al-Fatwa al-Kubra, (Beirut: Dr al-Marifah, n.d.), vol. 3, 474 see also,

    Sanou, Qoutoub Moustapha, The Sale of Debt as Implemented by the Islamic Financial Institutions in Malaysia, (Malaysia: IIUM Press, 2001), 58.

    23Qurn, al-Nis(4): 29.

    24See Al-Mubarak Puri Safiur-Rahman, Tafsr Ibn Kathr, (Riyadh: Dr al-salm, abridged 2nd edn. 2003), vol. 2,

    431.

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    transactions have to do with the exceptions.25

    These objections became the basis for the demand

    for and operations of Islamic banking system world over.

    In specific terms, Allah and His Messenger in an intensely vitriolic tenor condemned,

    castigated and prohibited the practice of rib. An instance of such prohibition is where Allah

    says:

    26

    O you who believe! Be afraid of Allah and give up what remains (due to you) from Rib (from

    now onward), if you are (really) believers.

    Failure to heed this commandment attracts a promise of war between Allah and His Messenger

    and the practitioners. 27 The Prophet has also been reported to have cursed: the one who

    consumes rib, the one who gives it to others, the one who writes it down and the one who

    witnesses it. He said: they are all the same.

    The term rib etymologically means increase, gain, height or excess.28 Before the advent of

    Islam, it was known in this same connotation as the excess charged to the borrower in

    consideration of the extension granted him for repayment of a loan after the initially agreed date

    of maturity.29

    It is literally translated into English as usury or interest.30

    In its technical Islamic

    25See Afolabi, J. A. et. al., Determinants of Interest Rate Spread in Nigeria: An Empirical Investigation, vol. 13

    No. 1, (2003), NDIC Quarterly, 31-32; see also, AbdulGafoor, A. L. M. Interest-free Commercial Banking,(Groningen: Apptec Publications, 1995), 1.

    26Qurn al-Baqarah (2): 278; see also Qurn, al-Baqarah (2): 275-276; l Imrn (3): 123; and al-Anm (6): 160-

    161.

    27Qurn al-Baqarah (2): 279.

    28See Rohi Baalbaki, Al-Mawrid, (Beirut: Dr al-Ilm l al-Mallyn, 13th edition, 2000), 574; see also, Muhammad

    Musleh Uddin, Meaning of Rib, in Readings in Islamic Banking, edited by Hoque, A. (Bangladesh: IslamicFoundation, 1987), 23; and Qurn, al-Baqarah (2): 276; al-ajj (22): 5 and al-Nal (16): 92 for similar usages.

    29See See Abd Al-Rahman Al-Jar, Kitb al-Fiqal madhib al-arba, (Cairo: Muasasah al-Mukhtr, 2001),

    vol. 2, p. 185; see also, Shafi, M. and Usmani, M. T. The Issue of Interest, (Karachi: Darul Ishaat, 1997), p. 19.

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    law usage, it has been generally defined as an unlawful gain derived from the quantitative

    inequality of the counter-values in any transaction purporting to effectuate the exchange of two or

    more species which belong to the same genus and are governed by the same illah (effective

    cause). It includes the deferred completion of the exchange of such species or even of the species

    which belong to different general but are governed by the same illah. It makes no difference

    whether or not the deferment is accompanied by an increase in any one of the exchanged counter-

    values.31 The quantitative inequality referred to in the definition explains the excess charged on

    one of the commodities of exchange. And unlawfulness of the gain derived therefrom relates to

    the determination of the difference and avoidance of the business risks attributed to other pure

    transactions like trade.32

    It can occur in any humanly conceivable transactions of exchange

    whether in cash or in material form. 33

    The scholars and jurists of Islamic law are unanimous on prohibition of rib as an exception

    to the general rule of permissibility of transactions. They have however maintained divergent

    positions both in the definition and applicability of the rule to the present day commercial loans,

    especially banking transactions. Nonetheless, Islamic banking has for the last few decades been

    in full operation assuming interest as a variant ofrib to be avoided in all its dealings. The above

    prohibition of rib imposes a duty of its avoidance on all Muslims as a matter of religious

    30Interest has although been defined as, money charged for borrowing money or paid to somebody who invests

    money; and Usury as the practice of lending money at excessively high rate of interest, making the latter a specie of

    the former, Oxford Advance Learners Dictionary of Current English, 5th

    edition, interest and usury; yet, the

    term under the Islamic law covers wider areas than these.

    31See Ab Zakaryyah Yaya Ibn Sharaf Al-Naww, Rawah al-libn, (Beirut: Maktabah al-Islam, 2nd edition,

    1984), vol. 3, 379; see also, Saleh, N. A., Unlawful Gain and Legitimate Profit in Islamic Law: Rib, Gharar andIslamic Banking, (London: Graham and Trotman, 1992), p. 16.

    32See Shafi, and Usmani, n. 28 at 20.

    33For a detailed discussion on the nature, types and development rib, see Al-abar, Muhammad Ibn Jarr, Al-Jmi

    Al-Bayn fTafsr al-Qurn, (Beirut: Dr al-Marifah, 1986), vol. 4, 59 upward.

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    practice. And by necessary implication, since the various services rendered by banks as referred

    to above have made them essential part of the present world that rarely could a nation function

    effectively without the services, strive to practice banking in an Islamic way also becomes a duty.

    5.0 Islamic Banking under the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999

    It must be pointed out from the outset that there is no place in the Constitution of the Federal

    Republic of Nigeria 1999 or the ones before it where provision is/was made for Islamic banking

    or any other type. This may be explained by the fact that the Constitution does not pretend to be

    capable of making provisions for all laws that need to be. Rather, by its supremacy provisions,34

    it portends to give validity to all the laws of the land as the makers of such laws derive their law

    making powers from it.35 By these provisions, the Constitution seeks to assume the status of

    Kelsons concept of Ground norm. This is the basic norm, that is, the common source for the

    validity of all norms that belong to the same order and the reason for their validity.36

    Thus, all the

    banking laws in Nigeria, including the one enabling Islamic banking have their roots traceable to

    the Constitution through this means.

    Even where any of these laws was made before the Constitution came into force, the validity

    of such law is co-opted into the Constitution as if its makers, then, also derived their powers from

    it. The laws in this category are referred to as the existing laws.37

    The purport of the provisions

    34See S. 1(1) and (3), Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (CFRN), 1999.

    35See S. 4 (1)-(9), CFRN, 1999; see also, AbdulQadir, I. A., Constitutional Impediments to the Total Enthronement

    of Sharah in Nigeria, in A Digest of Islamic Law and Jurisprudence in Nigeria, edited by Oseni, Z. I., (Auchi: DarAl-Nur, 2003), 165.

    36See Morrison, W., Jurisprudence from the Greek to Post-modernism, (London: Cavendish Publishing Limited,

    1997), pp. 337-338.

    37See S. 315 (4) (b), CFRN, 1999.

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    of section 315(4)(b) of the constitution was to bring all Nigerian laws predating its coming to

    being into its ambit and deem them as having been properly made under it. Thus, virtually all the

    laws regulating banking practices presently in Nigeria fall within this category.

    5.1 Islamic Banking as a Constitutional Right of the Nigerian Muslims

    The successive Nigerian Constitutions have always preserved the inalienable Fundamental

    Human Right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. This constitutional principle is

    borrowed from the widely believed precursor of Human Right, Magna Carter of 1215;38

    and the

    United Nations (UN) Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948. The preservation also

    relates, most importantly, to the fact that the religious past of the country, just like any other past

    never gets dead and buried. The 1999 Constitution in no uncertain terms provides that every

    person shall be entitled to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. These include freedom to

    change his religion or belief, and freedom (either alone or in community with others, and in

    public or private) to manifest and propagate his religion or belief in worship, teaching, practice

    and observance.39

    This provision necessitates a query as to what constitutes a religious freedom. The response

    to this poser would vary, depending on the faith and the ideology of the respondent. A Christian

    for instance may be prepared, in the notion of giving to Ceaser and God what respectively belong

    to them, to limit his right to religious freedom to matters of faith and worship only. A person

    38It has been argued that all the heads of rights in this document and the UN declarations which also borrowed from

    it later were copied, in the cause of the earliest contact of the Europeans with Islam and the works of the Muslims,

    from the rights established in the Qurn and Sunnah about 600 years earlier, see Alli, Y. O. Islam as the Flashlight

    of the Universal Human Right Formulation, vol. 2, (2004), Al-Maslaha - journal of Law and Religion, 144.

    39See S. 38 (1), CFRN, 1999; this provision is almost an ipssisima verbal reproduction of section 30, article 9 (1) of

    the European Convention for the Protection of Human Right and Fundamental Freedoms, 1953.

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    from the West may also be contented with the western compartmentalization of life into religious

    and temporal.40

    A Muslim on the other hand would view religion as covering all the facets of life. This is

    because his spiritual and moral worth is tested against his daily interaction with others at the

    congregational prayers, in marital union, in the pursuit of his legitimate livelihood and in the

    holding of public responsibilities, amongst others.41

    To him, right to freedom of religion would

    encompass aqdah wa al-ibdah (freedom of belief and worship), right to live by Allahs

    commandments (Sharah) and (amr bi al-marf wa al-nahy an al-munkar) right to encourage

    good and forbid evil.42

    Based on the foregoing background therefore, a Muslim would tend to avoid interest based

    transactions practiced under the conventional banking and opt for Islamic banking system. This

    is why an average Nigerian Muslim would either abstain from conventional bank or as a matter

    of necessity, operate a current account for the reason of its non-attraction of interest. This state of

    affairs however does not solve the problem as it merely amounts to what is referred to in Islamic

    jurisprudential principle as:

    " " or " " (adopting the lesser of two alternative

    harms). The first and the most grievous of the harms is the involvement in interest transactions

    and the adopted lesser one is dealing with such institution and not being bothered about what his

    40See Oredola, M. A. The 1999 Constitution and the New Initiative on the Sharah: Between the Ideal and the

    Possible in Al-Maslaha - journal of Law and Religion, vol. 2, 2004, p. 57.

    41See Tabiu, M. Realisation of Freedom of Religion under the Nigerian Constitution: The Challenges before

    Muslims, vol. 1:1, (1999), Al-Mujtahid, 60.

    42Ibid; see also, Qurn, al-Midah (5): 45-50; and l Imrn (3): 104; while al-Nal (16): 97 differentiate between

    the rewards for righteous deeds based on humanitarian grounds alone and the one based on religious belief.

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    deposit is being used for provided it is kept safe. That is, keeping it fallow as far as he is

    concerned.

    To the best of the writers knowledge, the phrase freedom (either alone or in community

    with others) to manifest his religious belief in worship, practice and observance in the above

    referred constitutional provisions had not been subject of judicial interpretation in Nigeria before

    May 2006. Thus, to do justice to its analysis, we have recourse to how it was interpreted in its

    jurisdiction of origin and adapt to the Nigeria peculiarity.

    The interpretation of that provision and section 30 of the Education Act43

    were the fulcrum of

    the case of Ahmad v. Inner London Education Authority (ILEA)44before the English Court of

    Appeal.In that case, Mr. Ahmad (the appellant) had been issued with a letter by the respondent

    (his employer) giving him ultimatum to either change his employment status from full-time to

    part-time or resign his appointment. The implication of change of status is less pay and less

    valuable pension right. The letter was issued because the respondent could no longer cope with

    the disruption of lessons caused by the appellants need to spend 45 minutes attending Friday

    Jumat service every week outside the school. The appellant opted for resignation and brought an

    action for unfair dismissal on ground of religious discrimination.

    The Education Act 1944 also has provisions which carry the above freedom of religion

    provisions of the European Convention for the protection of Human Right and Fundamental

    Freedom further. The Act prohibits, among other things, requiring a teacher to receive less pay or

    depriving him from promotion or other benefit for his religious opinion or for attending or

    refusing to attend religious worship. Also article 9 of ILEA staff code allows a teacher who have

    43Education Act, 1944.

    44[1978] 1 Q. B. 38.

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    objection to working on a particular day of the term, being a day of special obligation generally

    recognised in his religion as days when no work may be done, to go on leave with pay.

    The majority of the court dismissed the appeal holding that the Authority was not

    unreasonable in issuing the letter and that it does not amount to unfair dismissal. Some of the

    ratio decidendi were that the right has to be interpreted as to be consistent with the appellants

    duties under his contract of employment as it is being interpreted by majority of Muslim teachers

    who do not take time off their prayers. Also, that giving the appellant, who is a member of

    minority group - Islam, such privilege would amount to giving him preferential treatment over

    the great majority of the people.45

    However, Scarman L.J. in his dissenting decision allowed the appeal holding that although

    the 1944 Education Act did not have the Muslims in contemplation because Islam was not a

    substantial religious grouping then, yet, that does not remove the intention the Act was enacted to

    serve. That is, forbidding discrimination on the ground of religion. He held further that the statute

    should be interpreted in accordance with the societal reality which has recognised Islam as a

    substantial religious group. And that if the Act could take care of Sabbath and Sunday as days of

    special religious observance, apart from Good Friday and Easter Monday, it is implausible to

    interpret taking 45 minutes on Fridays to go to mosque as constituting a breach of contract of

    employment.46

    Taking this case from either the view point of the majority or the dissenting decision, the

    Constitutional provision gives the Nigerian Muslims a very firm footing to demand for and

    establish Islamic banking system. If the case was to be decided in Nigeria, the majority decision

    45Ibid, per Lord Denning MR., at pp. 40-41 and Orr LJ. at p. 45; see also, Denning MR., What Next in the Law,

    (London: Butterworths, 1982), pp. 283-284; with all respect to the Lord Justices, introduction of majority and

    minority into the entitlement to fundamental human right is absurd, it is like saying that the minority are less human.

    46Ibid, per Scarman L J. at pp. 47, 48 and 51.

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    of the Lord Justices, on the strength of their numerical ratio, would most likely sway along

    Scarman LJs position. The basis for this proposition is the nations historical antecedent of the

    caliphate system and the fact that Muslims constitutes the majority of its population, with at least

    50 percent and the remaining half shared between Christians and indigenous believers. 47 This

    has been responsible for the inclusive approach of the Nigerian Constitutions in accommodating

    the commitments of the various ethnic and religious groups in the country, hence the

    constitutional principle of federal character.48

    The very recent case of Bashirat Saliu & 2 Ors v The Provost, Kwara State College of

    Education Ilorin & 2 Ors49 however provides a locus classicus interpretation of section 38 of

    1999 Constitution on Right to Freedom of thought, conscience and religion. In that case, the

    applicants who are female Muslim students of the respondent institution filed an application for

    the enforcement of their Fundamental Human Right to freedom of Religion. The fulcrum of their

    application is an objection they had to Article J of the dress code of the institution which

    prohibits Dress/Apparels that cover the entire face of an individual, thereby making the

    immediate identity of the person inside impossible.50Relying on the applicants averment that

    47The total population of Nigeria by the last 1991 census was 88,992,220, see The Federal Republic of Nigeria,

    1991 National Census summary, (Lagos: National Population Commission, 199, 2; although the Commission alwaysavoid religious consideration in its documentation, yet, relying on data gathered from CIA World fact book, 2004,

    Population Reference Bureau, 2003, Nigerian Demographic and Health Survey, 1990, amongst others, the

    Population Resource Centre has put the estimated population as of 2005, at 137 million at ratio 50 per cent Muslims,

    40 per cent Christians and 10 per cent old indigenous believers, see, Batchelor, A. ed. Executive summary: A

    demographic profile of Nigeria, (Washington: Population Resource Centre),

    http://www.prcdc.org/summaries/nigeria/nigeria.html> (accessed 9 September, 2004).

    48See S. 14(3) & (4) CFRN, 1999; see also, Ejibowah, J. B., Constitutionalism and Political Inclusion in Nigeria,in Okon Akiba (ed.), Constitutionalism and Society in Africa, (Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2005), p.112.

    49Unreported Suit No. KWS/28M/2006 Of Kwara State High Court of Justice, Ilorin, ruling delivered on 8 May,

    2006.

    50See Kwara State College of Education Ilorin, Dress Code for the Students of the Kwara State College of

    Education Ilorin, dated 28 September, 2005.

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    their entire life is purely guided by the principles of Islamic tenets which regulates their dress and

    the literal dictionary meaning of the words manifest, observance and practice as contained in

    section 38 of the Constitution, the court held that the provisions of the above article J are

    unconstitutional, null and void and of no effect whatsoever.51

    The ratio of the above ruling could easily be extended to the religiosity of Islamic banking to

    the Nigerian Muslims. Their avoidance of interest, which is the basis of the conventional

    banking, is a serious matter of faith that, many Nigerian Muslims will not compromise. Since

    lack of alternative banking system is capable of impairing their economic prosperity therefore,

    their right to practise and observe their religious faith would require that they be given fair

    opportunity as those that believe in the conventional system. Unlike in the Ahmads case (above)

    where the right was seen by the court as giving preferential treatment, establishing Islamic

    banking in Nigeria would rather be effectuating the due right of the majority.

    As a fundamental human right, the Government is not only obliged to facilitate the

    actualisation of the system but also to avoid its being derogated upon except in the manner

    provided in the Constitution.52 Anything to the contrary will be discriminatory against Muslims

    by reason only of their religion. That too would amount to further infringement of their

    fundamental and other constitutional rights.53

    This is more particularly so as people of other

    religions are privileged by the status quo especially as they are not complaining.

    51Bashirat Saliu & 2 Ors v The Provost, Kwara State College of Education Ilorin & 2 Ors. Unreported Suit No.

    KWS/28M/2006 Of Kwara State High Court of Justice, Ilorin, ruling delivered on 8 May, 2006, p. 1152

    See S. 45 (1), CFRN, 1999; and Oredola, n. 8 at 60.

    53See SS. 15 (2) and 42 (1), CFRN, 1999.

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    5.2 Islamic Banking and the Constitutional Debates on Islamic Law

    The usual controversies and debate that greets every constitutional making process in the history

    of the Nigerian constitutional development particularly on the issue of Sharah, took a new turn

    in 1999. The catalyst was Zamfara States expression of intention to return to a full application of

    Islamic law. This project according to the States Commissioner for Justice includes the

    establishment of Islamic banking system.54

    Pursuant to this goal, the Government had floated

    Halal Group which was to become Halal Islamic Bank later. However, reasons were seen to

    merge the Group with Jaiz Group, another promoter with the same objective, for effective take-

    off.55

    The controversies especially among the legal luminaries have been hinged on the

    interpretation of section 10 of the Constitution regarding adoption of a State religion. The section

    provides that: The Government of the Federation or a State shall not adopt any religion as State

    Religion. Based on this, the opponents of the establishment of Islamic law and by necessary

    extension, establishment or promotion of Islamic banking especially by a government would

    perceive the move by the Zamfara State Government as contravening the Constitutional

    provisions. They have always interpreted the section as declaring Nigeria as a secular State.56

    54See Mahmud, A. B. Sharia and Democracy: The Zamfara State Experience, vol. 2, (2004), Al-Maslaha- journal

    of Law and Religion, 50.

    55 Halal Group was an investment holding company floated by the Zamfara state government purposely to promoteHalal Islamic bank, it however gave way to Jaiz International Plc. with similar object based on the advice of the

    president of the IDB, who could not bring IDB into the scheme because of the then non-member status of Nigeria,

    source: Alhaji Ibrahim Wakala (the Zamfara state commissioner for religious affairs), interview by thesis writer at

    Pan Pacific Hotel, Kuala Lumpur, 30 June, 2005; see also, Jaiz International Plc. Annual Report and Accounts, 2004,p. 4.

    56The word secular has been defined to mean an ideology and attitude to life that rejects spiritual values and the

    religious outlook, see Trimingham, J. S. The Influence of Islam upon Africa, (London: Longmans, 1968), 1.

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    One of such numerous views was expressed by Professor Agbede I. O., where he says: In a

    country that professed to be secular, the Islamic law as a distinct third system is hardly

    compatible with the express provisions of the Constitution which prohibits any law that

    discriminates on grounds inter alia of religion. 57 Similar views have been expressed by

    Professor Nwabueze B. O.,58

    Professor John Boye Ejobowah59

    and Honourable Justice Kayode

    Eso (Rtd.).60

    To all these scholars and jurists, such act as Zamfara State governments amounts to

    promoting or adopting Islam as a State Religion and as such unconstitutional.

    These views were however rebutted. It was conversely opined that the constitutional

    provisions rather than making Nigeria a secular state sees it as a pluralistic society and multi-

    religious state. That explains why both the Federal and States Governments sponsor and fund

    religious activities like Muslim and Christian Pilgrims Welfare Boards, establish Mosques and

    Churches in State Houses. They give statutory recognition to and observe Saturday and Sunday

    work-free days in conformance to Christian and Sabbath injunctions. Friday was made half-

    work-day to allow for observance of Friday congregational prayer and public holidays were

    declared to mark religious festivals. With all these no state can claim to be secular. This is more

    particularly so as there is no place in the Constitution where such provision is contained.61

    57See Agbede, I. O. The Legal Pluralism - the symbiosis of customary and religious laws: Problems and

    Prospects, in Fundamentals of Nigerian Law, edited by Ajomo, M. A. (Ibadan: Spectrum Books, 1989), 238.

    58See Nwabueze, B. O. Constitutional Problems of Sharah, in The Sharah Issue: Working Papers for a

    Dialogue, (Lagos: Committee of Concerned Citizens, 2000), 17.

    59 See Ejibowah, J. B. Constitutionalism and Political Inclusion in Nigeria, in Okon Akiba (ed.), Constitutionalismand Society in Africa, (Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company 2004), p. 112-113.

    60Cited by Adegbite, A. Sharah in the context of Nigeria, in The Sharah Issue, n. 58 at 73-74.

    61See AbdulQadir, I. A., Constitutional Impediments to the Total Enthronement of Sharah in Nigeria, in A

    Digest of Islamic Law and Jurisprudence in Nigeria, edited by Oseni, Z. I., (Auchi: Dar Al-Nur, 2003), p. 169; seealso, Oredola, M. A. The 1999 Constitution and the New Initiative on the Sharah: Between the Ideal and the

    Possible in Al-Maslaha - journal of Law and Religion, vol. 2, 2004, p. 58; and Yadudu, A. H. The Sharah Debatein Nigeria: Time for Reflection, in The Sharah Issue, n. 58 at 39.

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    Up till December 2005, a number of conventional banks were operating under the sole

    ownership of or in partnership with some state governments. These included: Bank of the North

    Plc., owned by about fifteen northern States; Oodua Group of company, holding WEMA Bank

    Plc. and National Bank Plc., owned by Oyo, Osun, Ondo, Ogun, and Ekiti States; and Trade

    Bank Plc., owned by Kwara and Kogi states amongst others.62

    Thus, if the ownership of these

    banks by state governments did not amount to adoption of state religion and was not

    unconstitutional, then, the promotion and establishment of Islamic bank by Zamfara state and

    any other state that desires it would not be as well.

    Meanwhile aside from the need to redress the past religious discrimination or the exercise of

    Fundamental Human Right to freedom of religion, Islamic banking aims at the overall prosperity

    for all the members of a society as well as the nation vide equitable distribution of wealth and

    resources. This was as much appreciated by the former Governor of the Bank of England, Sir

    Eddie George when he said: Indeed, it seems to me also that as a matter of general principle, a

    wider range of financial products would benefit the whole of our Community, and that Islamic

    products could prove to be attractive beyond the purely Muslim sector.63 Thus, by giving the

    necessary political will to effectuate the establishment of Islamic banking system, the

    Government would only be fulfilling its primary purpose of welfare of the people as directed by

    the Constitution.64

    62See Igweke, K. I., Banking and Negotiable Instruments, (Onitsha: Africana-Fep Publishers Limited, 1991), 2; and

    Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), 2003 Annual Report and Statement of Account, 19-20; some ofthem have merged with other banks in the process of the CBN capitalisation programme that ended in December,

    2005.

    63See Parker, M., FSA Authorisation: Challenges to IBB, Islamic Banker, Issue No. 102/103, July/August, 2004,

    6; see similar remarks in the keynote address of William L. Rutledge, Executive Vice President of the U.S. Federal

    Reserve at the 2005 Arab Bankers Association of North America (ABANA) Conference on Islamic Finance: Players,

    Products & Innovations in New York City, April, 2005.

    64See S. 14 (2)(b), CFRN, 1999.

    http://www.ny.frb.org/aboutthefed/orgchart/rutledge.htmlhttp://www.ny.frb.org/aboutthefed/orgchart/rutledge.html
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    6.0 Making Laws for Islamic Banking in Nigeria

    In the Nigerian political experience especially since its independence, the legislative functions of

    the country have been performed either by Military regimes or the legislative Assembly. During

    Military regimes,65

    the law making body was the all-military Supreme Military Council, changed

    lately to Armed Forces Ruling Council. The Council also performed the executive functions of a

    democratic government.66

    In the democratic eras however, like in any other democracy, the task

    of making laws for the peace, order and good government of the Federation or the States or any

    parts thereof is the central duty of both the Federal and States Legislatures. They perform these

    duties along with others like control of the executive excesses through oversight investigative

    powers, confirmation of appointments and treaties, and sometimes mobilization of public

    consents for executive policies as peoples representatives.67

    Nigeria operates bicameral Federal legislature comprising of a Senate and a House of

    Representatives. There are also states Houses of Assembly as states legislative bodies in all states

    of the federation. The scope of the respective legislative organs law making powers is delineated

    in the Constitution. The National Assembly has powers to make laws on matters contained in the

    65Military rule in Nigeria covered a period of 30 years out of her 39 years of independence before the present

    democratic dispensation, that is, between 1966-1979 and 1983-1999.

    66 These were constituted mainly by top ranking ruling Military men including the Head of State and his ServiceChiefs and not more than 10 men altogether making laws for the whole of the Federation while the Military

    Administrators of each State were empowered to make laws known as Edicts for their respective States which were

    administered like administrative units of the Federal Government, see Carnelian International,Nigeria: The 1966Coups, Civil War and Gowons Government, (accessed 26 February, 2005).

    67See SS. 4(1), (2), (6), (7) and 12, CFRN, 1999; see also, Abdulqadir, I. A., Constitutional impediments n. 61, p.

    171; and Jain, R. B. The Legislative Process in Development: A Conceptual Analysis, in Legislative Process inDevelopment, edited by Jain, R. B. (New Delhi: Gitanjali, 1985), 8-9.

    http://www.carnelian-international.com/http://www.carnelian-international.com/http://www.carnelian-international.com/
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    exclusive legislative list to the exclusion of the states Houses of Assembly68

    while it has

    concurrent powers with the latter to make laws on matters contained in the concurrent legislative

    list.69

    On the other hand, the States Houses of Assembly have powers to make laws on matters

    not included in the exclusive legislative list and on matters contained in the concurrent legislative

    list.70

    In case of any inconsistency in the laws made by the National and states legislatures, the

    law made by the National Assembly shall prevail.71

    Matters of banks, banking, bill of exchange

    and promissory notes constitute item number 6 on the exclusive legislative list. Thus, only the

    National Assembly can make laws on matters pertaining to Islamic banks and banking.

    Except in the areas of confirmation of nominations of ministers and chairmen and members

    of some federal executive bodies where the senate has exclusive powers,72

    the two houses of the

    National Assembly enjoy essentially the same powers. They enjoy equal status in their law

    making functions as any bill passed by one must have a concurrent passage by the other before

    the President can assent to it.73

    For the first time in the history of the Nigerian banking law, provisions were made for a

    banking system that deviate from the conventional banking in the Banks and other Financial

    Institutions Decree (BOFID) No. 25, 1991. In its categorization of banks in Nigeria, BOFID

    68These are contained in Part I of the second schedule to 1999 Constitution; see also, Attorney General of Ondo

    state v Attorney General of the Federation [2002] 6 SCNJ 1.

    69These are contained in the Part II to the second schedule of 1999 Constitution; see also, S. 4(2) and (3) (a), CFRN,

    1999.

    70See S. 4(7) (a) and (b), CFRN, 1999.

    71 See S. 4 (5) CFRN, 1999.

    72SS. 147 (2) and 154 (1) CFRN, 1999.

    73A bill is a document containing proposed new law presented to the parliament for discussion; in Nigeria, it may be

    government bill i.e. emanating from other arms of the government or private bill i.e. from members of the public or

    emanating from either house, see Federal Republic of Nigeria (FRN), Standing Order of the House ofRepresentatives, Order XII, Rules 2 and 15 (2); see also S. 58, CFRN 1999; and, The National Assembly v ThePresident of the Federal Republic of Nigeria & 2 Ors [2003] 41 WLR 94 at 97.

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    provides that the President on the recommendation of the Central Bank shall, from time to time,

    determine, as he may deem appropriate, the minimum paid-up share capital of each category of

    banks. It then made Profit and Loss Sharing bank a category of the Nigerian banks with

    minimum paid-up share capital, for the time being, of N50,000,000 (USD 5, 045 408.70).74 By

    virtue of section 315 (4) (b) of the 1999 constitution, BOFID is presumed to be part of the

    constitution and its makers with the authority of elected legislature as an existing law. The

    Section defined existing law as any law including any rule of law or any enactment or

    instrument, which is in force immediately before the commencement date of the constitution or

    which having been passed or made before that date comes into force after that date. The

    commencement date referred to in this definition is 29th

    day of May, 1999.75

    In recognition of the peculiarities of this new banking system, the law made provisions for a

    number of exceptions to facilitate its smooth operations. Chief among these exceptions is the

    non-applicability of the need to display the interest rate in the banking premises of a PLS bank.

    The relevant Section of the law provides:

    Every bank shall display at its offices its lending and deposit interest rates and shall

    render to the Bank information on such rates as may be specified, from time to time,

    by the Bank, provided that the provisions of this subsection shall not apply to

    Profit and Loss sharing banks.76

    74See S. 9(1) and (2) Banks and other Financial Institutions Decree (BOFID), 1991 (No. 25), conversion based on

    the rate as of year of the enactment of the Decree at N9.91 to USD1.00, see, Free Encyclopaedia,Exchange RateHistory of Nigeria Naira, , (accessed 24 January, 2006); it should be noted that

    the amendment of this Decree by Decree No. 38 of 1998 shifted the power to determine the minimum paid-up capital

    of banks from the President to the Central Bank and in the process created an impression that the categorisation of

    banks introduced by the principal Decree has been removed by replacing the old subsection 2 with subsection 3 andmaking the latter to be subsection 2. This impression must have informed the recent flat banks recapitalisation policy

    of the CBN; this discussion is more appropriately treated in another paper by this author on the legality of the banks

    recapitalisation.

    75See S. 1 (2), Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (Promulgation) Decree, 1999.

    76S. 23(1) BOFIA, 1991 as amended; emphasis mine and reference to Bank as opposed to bank in this law

    relates to the Central Bank of Nigeria and any other bank respectively, see S. 61 thereof.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nairahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naira
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    This provision presumes the payment or taking of interest on deposits or loans as a necessary

    practice of banks and thus mandated the display of the interest rates. Its exemption of PLS banks

    from the practice therefore sets a solid foundation for Islamic banking system. Similar provisions

    of the Decree empowered the Central Bank Governor to further exempt PLS banks from the

    general provisions of the Decree as he may think fit.77

    Meanwhile, the banking laws in Nigeria, as they presently relate to Islamic banking, are at

    best accommodative of its establishment and nothing is on ground to regulate the nitty-gritty of

    its peculiar operations. This reason would justify the need for either a separate law and guidelines

    for Islamic banking, as the case in Malaysia and Bahrain. 78 The needed law would suit the

    philosophy of Islamic banking system, especially in terms of its types of business which are still

    being restricted by the existing banking laws. It would also provide for supervision by Sharah

    Advisory Council and committees both at the CBN and the Islamic bank(s) respectively.

    However, since the matter is out of the reach of states legislature, the passage of such laws may

    not be as easy as those made by some states of the north to return to full application of Islamic

    law.

    As pressing as the need for this law might be, the composition of the National Assembly is

    such that it may be difficult for a state or the Representatives of a few numbers of them to push

    through a bill to be passed into laws especially the one with religious connotation.79

    This position

    77See S. 52 BOFID, 1991, this particular section has been amended by removal of the exemption and introduction of

    entirely new provision on manner of sharing revenues from penalties among the CBN, NDIC and the Consolidated

    Revenue Fund.

    78The relevant law and regulations in Malaysia are Islamic Banking Act, 1983 (Act 276 Laws of Malaysia) as

    amended; Guideline on Skim Perbankan Tampa Faedah (Interest-Free Scheme), 1993; and Guideline on thegovernance of Sharah Committee for the Islamic Financial Institutions, 2004; for Bahrain, see, Bahrain Monetary

    Agency, Prudential Information and Regulatory Framework for Islamic Banks (PIRI), 2005.

    79Each of the 36 states of the Federation produces three senators and one is produced by the Federal Capital

    Territory (FCT) to make 109 all together. The House of Representatives is constituted by 360 honourable members

    representing federal constituencies of nearly equal population as far as possible, see SS. 48 and 49, CFRN,1999.

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    would remain so however strong the desire of their representatives or genuine the need of their

    people might be. Because, unless a matter is generally viewed as one of national importance, the

    sponsors of a bill would have to lobby and convince at least a simple majority of members who

    almost certainly would have contrary interest to serve. This is apart from the fact that

    opportunities to delay or even kill a bill at proposal level and to change it in respect so

    fundamental as to destroy its original purpose are built into virtually alls points of the legislative

    process.80

    Given the number of the northern States, 19 of them, and their Federal Constituencies based

    on the population of their people reflecting their quota in the two Houses of the National

    Assembly, it would be expected that the Senators from the north should be able to form a block.

    To push such a bill for Islamic Banking through would therefore require winning few other

    members from other parts of the county over.81

    However, even among the northern States, only

    Zamfara State government has shown commitment to the promotion of Islamic banking despite

    the fact that majority of them have adopted full application of Islamic law. 82 As such getting

    other Senators and Honourable members from those other northern States together to agree to

    support bills on the banking law may be problematic.

    Closely related to this is the problem of constitutional lacuna hinged on the Nigerian

    bicameral legislative system operating at the federal level. By this system, a bill which may

    80See Keef, W. J. and Ogul, M. S. The American Legislative Process Congress and the States, (New Jersey:

    Prentice-Hall Incorporation, 1993), 39.

    81 57 senators representing 52.3 percent of their total number are from the northern states while their honourablemembers counterpart are 189 representing 52.5 percent of the total number, see Anyanwu, C. N. D., The Law Makers Federal Republic of Nigeria 2003-2007, (New Jersey: Startcraft International, 2003), pp. 73-262; although thispublication like any other on national Assembly documents avoided reference to religious affiliation of the members,

    yet the figures were arrived at tracing through the names of the members.

    82The state single-handedly took the initiative of establishing Islamic banking system as part of its policy to return to

    full application of Islamic law before reason were seen to merge its efforts with that of Jaiz International Plc., see

    Jaiz International Plc., Annual Report 2004, p. 4.

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    although emanate from either house must be passed separately by the other house. Agreement

    must be reached by the two houses on any amendment that may be made on a bill before it is sent

    to the President for assent.83

    The lacuna relates to the silence of the Constitution on how long the

    other house can hold a bill requiring concurrent passage. The House of Representatives took

    advantage of this lacuna to withhold both BOFIA and CBN amendment bills passed by the

    Senate since February, 2005. Those amendments which principally void the Central Bank of

    Nigeria policy of parallel categorisation of banks84 would have had significant impacts on the

    issuance of licence and operations of Islamic banking in the country. And that situation of

    withholding gives a clear insight of what Islamic banking bill is likely to go through whenever it

    is presented for passage.85

    This situation is incomparable to what obtains in similar situation

    under the Federal Constitution of Malaysia, 1958 as amended.86

    This problem would be compounded by the fact that legislators in the developing nations, as

    typical of Nigeria, are always more conscious of their own personal and political interests. This is

    unlike the case with their counterparts in the developed world where legislators are committed to

    83See S. 58 (2) and (3), CFRN, 1999.

    84The CBN in its July 2004 banks reform made an upward review of banks capital base from N2 billion to N25

    billion on a flat basis for all banks, overriding the categorization of banks on different share capital contained in

    section 9 (2) BOFID 1991 as amended, under which PLS banking was first recognised

    85This lacuna seems premeditated as it provides a safe haven for the executive to wrestle any bill, as it is confirmed

    in this case, that would undermine its policies by lobbying the other House not to pass it; the same Constitution

    would not allow similar fate to befall appropriation bill or any other money bill or a bill for imposition of increase in

    tax, duty or fee or for reduction, withdrawal, or cancellation thereof; in such cases, the President of the Senate wasmandated within fourteen days after the lapse of two months of the other house refusal to pass the bill to convene a

    meeting of the joint finance committee and if this committee could not resolve the differences, a joint session of the

    National Assembly to pass the bill, see, S.59 (1) (a), (b), (2) and (3), CFRN, 1999.

    86Under S. 68, Federal Constitution of Malaysia, as at 1 April, 2000, whenever there is such situation of withholding

    by one of the Houses, the bill becomes automatically passed upon expiration of 1 month from the date of passage by

    the first house in case of financial bill and 12 months in case of other bill; see also, Wu Min Aun, The MalaysianLegal System, (Selangor: Longman, 1999), p. 224.

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    28

    working for the interest of their constituencies.87

    This often makes the latter to oppose measures

    which by all definitions are in the best interest of the people they represent.88 They are always far

    detached from their people to know their concern or be reachable at will when matters concerning

    the people are being treated in the legislative Houses.89

    Quite a number of the legislators as much as other policy makers are owners and shareholders

    in the existing conventional banks and possess some other interest earning assets. A Senator has

    been quoted to have said that he was not only a bank customer but he has also been a shareholder

    since the past twenty three years and knows the intricacies of what goes on in the sector.90

    Given

    this spirit therefore, it is very unlikely that majority of them will be disposed to making any law

    that would tend to give room for rivalry with their personal interests in the name of economic

    emancipation of the masses. This situation was adequately captured by the view that it takes a

    large measure of self denial to accept an argument which threatens to slash a significant measure

    of ones income. It makes no difference whether prosperity may eventually, through Islamic

    banking, spread wide enough to make up for the loss at the personal level.91

    7.0 Conclusion87

    A study in the US showed that Senators attend to an average of 302 and Representatives 115 cases a week from

    their constituencies, see Johannes, J. R. The distribution of casework in the US Congress: An uneven burden,

    Legislative Studies Quarterly, vol. 5 November, 1980, p. 519, cited by Keef, W. J. and Ogul, M. S. The AmericanLegislative Process Congress and the States, (New Jersey: Prentice-Hall Incorporation, 1993), p. 28.

    88 See Jain, R. B. The Legislative Process in Development: A Conceptual Analysis, in Legislative Process inDevelopment, edited by Jain, R. B. (New Delhi: Gitanjali, 1985), p. 16.

    89Ibid.

    90Senator Idris Kuta, Chairman of the Northern Senators Forum, reacting to CBN bank reform after a meeting of the

    Forum, see Ayodele Aminu, N25bn Capital: CBN to bear merger costs - Northern senators parley inconclusive,

    This Day, Wednesday, 4 August, 2004, 1 and 6.91

    See Ahmad, S. M. Towards Interest-Free Banking, (New Delhi: International Islamic Publishers, 1992), 22.

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    As a Fundamental Right, the Nigerian Muslims are entitled to be given opportunity to operate

    their economic activities in a manner conducive to their religious belief. Such opportunity would

    mean provision of a level playing ground in a pluralistic society where citizens should have

    choice of how they conduct their business. Much as no one is to be compelled to participate in

    the new system, justice would also demand that no one is excluded from using or implementing

    it. In Abraham Lincolns words, as I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This

    expresses my idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the extent of the difference is no

    democracy. And the writer wishes to add: effectuating the operations of Islamic banking system

    as a constitutional right in Nigeria expresses a true idea of constitutionalism. Anything to the

    contrary would amount to derogation of not only the right of the Muslims but also economic

    prosperity of the nation as a whole.