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Faith, Finance, and the Constitution: Pluralism Under Pressure Islamic Accounting and the Rights of 240 Million Nigerians -By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo

A national accounting framework must remain religiously neutral, inclusive, and firmly grounded in constitutional principles. Anything less risks undermining social cohesion, constitutional supremacy, and the fundamental principle that Nigeria belongs equally to all its citizens, regardless of faith.

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Daniel Nduka Okonkwo

Nigeria is a deeply multicultural society, religiously, culturally, and legally. With an estimated population of over 240 million people, the country is home to Christians, Muslims, and adherents of traditional belief systems, all of whom are constitutionally guaranteed equal protection under the law and freedom of conscience. It is against this scenery that the growing discourse around the integration of Islamic (Sharia-compliant) accounting into Nigeria’s broader accounting and financial system raises fundamental constitutional, ethical, and governance questions.

Islamic accounting may be coherent within Islamic jurisprudence, but the real concern is whether a faith-based system should be elevated within Nigeria’s national accounting framework. As a secular and religiously diverse country, adopting a religious accounting model risks privileging one belief system, undermining inclusivity, constitutional neutrality, and economic flexibility. National accounting standards should remain universal and religiously neutral, serving all citizens regardless of faith.

Islamic financial institutions operate under a specialized framework commonly referred to as Islamic Accounting or Sharia-compliant accounting. This framework mandates that financial transactions, reporting, and auditing strictly conform to Islamic principles derived from the Qur’an and Sunnah. It prohibits riba (interest), maisir (gambling or speculation), and gharar (excessive uncertainty), while emphasizing profit-and-loss sharing through instruments such as Mudaraba and Musharaka. Governance structures typically include Shariah Advisory Committees (SACs), internal Sharia auditors, and reporting obligations aligned with standards issued by the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI).

The 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) is explicit on matters of religion and state authority.

Section 38 guarantees every Nigerian the freedom of thought, conscience, and religion, including the right to manifest and practice one’s religion.

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Sections 260–264 (for the Federal Capital Territory) and Sections 275–279 (for the States) establish Sharia Courts of Appeal, but their jurisdiction is clearly limited to matters of Islamic personal law, including marriage, divorce, inheritance, guardianship, and waqf (endowment).

Importantly, the Constitution does not authorize Sharia as a national civil, commercial, or accounting system, nor does it empower any religious framework to override others in matters of general governance, commerce, or public administration.

Thus, while Sharia is constitutionally recognized, its application is deliberately circumscribed. The framers of the Constitution anticipated Nigeria’s diversity and structured the legal system to prevent the dominance of any single religious ideology over national life.

Islamic finance in Nigeria is constitutionally permissible when it is voluntary. Under the principles of freedom of religion and freedom of contract, Muslims and non-Muslims who so choose may participate in non-interest financial institutions (NIFIs). The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) lawfully regulates these institutions, including requirements that Sharia non-compliance be reported by Shariah Advisory Committees to Boards of Directors and monitored through internal Sharia audits.

However, a clear constitutional line is crossed when a religiously derived accounting system is presented as a national standard, implicitly superior to or overriding, conventional accounting frameworks used by citizens of other faiths.

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Accounting is not merely a technical exercise; it is a national language of economic reporting, taxation, public finance, and corporate governance. Imposing a faith-specific accounting philosophy, regardless of its sophistication, undermines constitutional neutrality and risks marginalizing other belief systems.

Proponents often argue that Islamic accounting promotes ethics, transparency, and equitable risk-sharing. Yet ethics are not exclusive to Islam. Christianity, traditional African belief systems, and secular professional standards all provide robust ethical frameworks emphasizing honesty, stewardship, fairness, and accountability.

Nigeria’s existing accounting ecosystem anchored in International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), professional codes of conduct, and statutory oversight, was deliberately designed to be religion-neutral to accommodate the country’s diversity.

Furthermore, Sharia is not limited to finance. It is a comprehensive legal and moral system intended to regulate all aspects of life. Globally, criticisms of Sharia often focus on interpretations that permit corporal or capital punishments (hudud), restrictions on women’s rights, unequal inheritance rules, limitations on free expression, and penalties for apostasy. While these elements may not be directly embedded in accounting standards, they form part of the broader philosophical foundation from which Sharia-based systems emerge.

For many Nigerians of other faiths, this raises legitimate concerns about institutional creep, where technical accommodation gradually evolves into normative dominance.

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Nigeria is not an Islamic state, a Christian state, or a theocratic state of any kind. It is a constitutional democracy. Decisions that affect national systems, particularly accounting, taxation, and financial reporting, must be reached through broad consultation, legislative debate, and inclusive policymaking.

No single religious group, regardless of its population size, can constitutionally determine standards for all Nigerians without violating both the spirit and letter of the Constitution.

Islamic accounting has a legitimate place in Nigeria as a voluntary system for Islamic financial institutions and willing participants. That legitimacy ends where compulsion begins.

A national accounting framework must remain religiously neutral, inclusive, and firmly grounded in constitutional principles. Anything less risks undermining social cohesion, constitutional supremacy, and the fundamental principle that Nigeria belongs equally to all its citizens, regardless of faith.

Pluralism is not a weakness of the Nigerian state; it is its defining strength. Any financial or accounting reform that fails to respect this reality is not only improper but also unconstitutional in spirit and unsustainable in practice.

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Daniel Nduka Okonkwo is a seasoned writer, human rights advocate, and public affairs analyst renowned for his incisive commentary on governance, justice, and social equity. Through Profiles International Human Rights Advocate, he champions accountability, transparency, and institutional reform in Nigeria and beyond. With over 1,000 published articles indexed on Google, his work has appeared on Sahara Reporters and other leading international media platforms.

He is also an accomplished transcriptionist, petition writer, ghostwriter, and freelance journalist, widely recognized for his precision, persuasive communication, and resolved commitment to human rights.

Contact: dan.okonkwo.73@gmail.comDaniel Nduka Okonkwo.

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