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Entertainment of Tuesday, 4 May 2021

Source: www.mynigeria.com

You are going straight to 'Paradise' If bandits kill you - Islamic Cleric to Muslims

Islamic cleric and deputy chief Imam of the National Mosque, Abuja, Professor Ibrahim Maqari has assured Muslims that there is a place for them in paradise if they die in the hands of bandits and terrorists.

According to him, Islam does not permit Muslims to pay ransom to enemies.

He said this at this year's Ramadan tafsir at the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

"Since Allah (SWT) has forbidden the payment of money to an enemy who is at war with you, in order not to empower them to continue to fight you, then contributing money as ransom for the release of kidnapped persons, is haram (prohibited),” he said.

Quoting a Hadith (prophetic tradition), Mr Maqari narrated the story of a man who approached Prophet Muhammad, asking him what to do if someone tried to rob him of his money and the Prophet told him to resist the person. The man then asked the Prophet “what if the person fights me, and the Prophet told him to fight back.”

“What if I kill him,” he asked, and the Prophet said, “He goes to hellfire.” He asked again, “What if he kills me?” and the prophet said, “you enter paradise.”

In a publication cited on gistmania.com, the deputy chief Imam emphasised that the hadith upholds the impermissibility of giving ransom to kidnappers. He also explained that Islam’s code for discouraging criminality provides that material demands imposed as conditions by criminals are to be ignored, no matter what havoc the criminals threaten to unleash if the demands are not met.

Refusing to meet the demands of kidnappers would inevitably turn them into losers who wasted their money to feed the captive, wasted their bullets in killing them and wasted their time, he said.

“But he (the criminal) has been made aware that the money is never going to be paid and the one who is killed (the victim) is going to paradise,” he said. Maqari said applying the Islamic provisions can effectively address the challenges of kidnapping currently affecting the society.

“But as long as people will continue to give ransom to secure the release of their loved ones, the recipients of the money will continue to use it to acquire more arms that they will use to perpetrate their atrocity and promote it as a business,” he advised.

“So the best way of stopping it, is for the criminal to know that if he kidnaps someone, he can choose to chop his body into pieces,” but he will not get what he wants.