A Nigerian woman has been burnt to death in an act of mob justice for alleged blasphemy.
She was mobbed in the Nigeria’s Niger State after she was accused of blaspheming against Prophet Muhammad, police disclosed.
Nigerian police condemned the killing of the woman – identified in local media as a food vendor named Amaye – as “jungle justice”.
According to the police, an investigation was under way to arrest and prosecute the perpetrators.
Reports by multiple local media outlets cited eyewitnesses as saying a man jokingly proposed marriage to the vendor, and her response was considered blasphemous by some people in the area.
According to the Niger Police spokesperson,
Wasiu Abiodun, “Unfortunately, it led to a mob attack, and [she] was set ablaze before a reinforcement of security teams could arrive at the scene.”
Meanwhile, the spokesperson urged members of the public to remain calm and not to take the law into their own hands following the killing on Saturday in Kasuwan-Garba town.
Such killings are not uncommon in northern Nigeria, where blasphemy is regarded as a criminal offence under Islamic (Sharia) law, which operates alongside secular law in 12 mainly Muslim states.
At least two other people have been lynched over such accusations in the last three years, with critics pointing out that not enough is being done to prevent the killings that have targeted both Muslims and Christians.
In 2022, student Deborah Samuel was beaten and burned alive in Sokoto state after being accused of making blasphemous comments.
Last year, a butcher, Usman Buda, was stoned to death in the same state under similar circumstances.
Though Nigeria’s constitution upholds freedom of speech, the country remains deeply divided on matters of faith and justice.
Nigeria’s Supreme Court has in the past ruled that blasphemy allegations must be proven in a court of law.
Source:Africa Publicity