Police
enforcing Islamic law in the city of Kano publicly destroyed some 240,000
bottles of beer on Wednesday, the latest move in a wider crackdown on behaviour
deemed “immoral” in the area.
The
banned booze had been confiscated from trucks coming into the city in recent
weeks, said officials from the Hisbah, the patrol tasked with enforcing the
strict Islamic law, known as sharia.
Kano’s
Hisbah chief Aminu Daurawa said at the bottle-breaking ceremony he had “the
ardent hope this will bring an end to the consumption of such prohibited
substances”.
A large
bulldozer smashed the bottles to shouts of “Allahu Ahkbar” (God is Great) from
supporters outside the Hisbah headquarters in Kano, the largest city in Nigeria’s
mainly Muslim north.
Kegs
containing more than 8,000 litres of a local alcoholic brew called “burukutu”
and 320,000 cigarettes were also destroyed.
“We hope
this measure will help restore the tarnished image of Kano,” said Daurawa.
Since
September, the Hisbah have launched sweeping crackdowns and made hundreds of
arrests in Kano following a state-government directive to cleanse the
commercial hub of so-called “immoral” practices.
The
9,000-strong moral police force works alongside the civilian police but also
has other duties, including community development work and dispute resolution.
Sharia
was reintroduced across northern Nigeria in 2001, but the code has been
unevenly applied.
Alcohol
is typically easy to find in Kano, including at hotels and bars in
neighbourhoods like Sabon Gari, inhabited by the city’s sizeable Christian
minority.
But the
Hisbah boss vowed that this was set to change.
“We
hereby send warning to unrepentant offenders that Hisbah personnel will soon
embark on an operation into every nook and corner of (Kano) state to put an end
to the sale and consumption of alcohol and all other intoxicants,” Daurawa
said.
People
accused of engaging in prostitution and homosexual sex have been among those
arrested in the latest crackdown, along with alleged drunks and drug addicts.
Nigeria
is divided between a mostly Christian south and a predominately Muslim north.
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