Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs

Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs
AbbreviationNSCIA
Founded1 January 1974
(50 years ago)
 (1974-01-01) in Kaduna, Kaduna State,
Nigeria
TypeNon-profit
religious organization
HeadquartersAbuja National Mosque,
Abuja, Nigeria
Location
  • Nigeria
President General
Muhammadu Sa'ad Abubakar
Websitenscia.com.ng/

The Nigeria Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) was established in 1973 at a national conference of Nigerian Muslim leaders in Kaduna under the auspices of Jama'atu Nasril Islam (JNI), the group for all the Islamic organisations in Northern Nigeria.[1] In the South-West, prior to this conference, the first Muslim organisation to be formed after independence in 1960 was the United Muslim Council (UMC), but this was embraced by few Muslims in the Western Zone as it was championed by the ruling political party. According to Adegbite,[2] the emergence and coming together of the Western Joint Muslim Organisation (WESJOMO), the Najah Joint Muslim Organisation (NAJOMO) and the Nigerian Muslim Council (NMC) of Lagos State enabled the region to work hand-in-hand with the JNI to create in 1973 the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs.[3]

The landmark convergence in Kaduna came as an answer to the call for an all-embracing central leadership that would serve as the unifier and bridge among different Muslim groups in the country, as stipulated in Article One of the NSCIA Charter “Muslim Communities, Islamic organisations and individual Muslims are hereby constituted into a central body to be known and called the Nigerian Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs.”[4] It has also been described as a turning point for it, starting from then, enables Muslims all over the country to interact with the government in one voice on all matters of concern to Islam, an intractable challenge until the founding of the council.[5]

The council's mandate to serve as the apex leadership body for the Nigerian Muslim community was first undertaken by the first President-General, Sultan Siddiq Abubakar III, the then Sultan of Sokoto, joined by the first Secretary-General, Ibrahim Dasuki, who later rose to assume the Sultan position. The former Nigerian Minister of Works, Isa Kaita, was appointed National Treasurer while Dr Lateef Adegbite, the chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee and the then the Attorney-General and Commissioner of Justice of the Western Region of Nigeria, was made the first National Legal Adviser. He later became the Secretary-General in 1988.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference :3 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Abdulazeez, Shittu Balogun (October 2021). "The Role of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs in Unifying Muslims in Nigeria: Prospects and Challenges". International Journal for Muslim World Studies. 9: 35–66.
  3. ^ Rufai, Saheed Ahmad (2011-08-25). "The Muslim Minority of Southwestern Nigeria: WESTJOMO and the Challenge of Speaking with One Voice". Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs. 31 (2): 285–291. doi:10.1080/13602004.2011.583523. ISSN 1360-2004. S2CID 143806647.
  4. ^ NSCIA, Constitution (1974). "Constitution of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs" (PDF).
  5. ^ Rufai, Saheed Ahmad (2013). "The Politics of Islamic Leadership and Representation in Nigeria: A Historical Analytical Study on the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA)" (PDF). Jurnal Al-Tamaddun. 8 (1): 39–50. doi:10.22452/JAT.vol8no1.3. Retrieved 10 January 2021.