May 14, 2026

Hijab ruling: activist-lawyer appears in the Supreme Court on traditional worshippers attire

By Adamu Abubakar Isa

A human rights activist Malcolm Omirhobo, caused a scene at the Supreme Court premises in Abuja on Thursday.

Mr Malcom defied the dress code for lawyers by appearing on his legal robe, complemented with a traditional apparel.

The lawyer, who said he is a traditionalist, argued that his action was inspired by the ruling of the Supreme Court judgement in favour of Muslim female students wearing their hijab in Lagos schools.

“I am a traditionalist. I have been missing all along until the Supreme Court gave the judgment on Friday that people can now appear in their religious attires of worship in their school and public school for that matter,” he said in an interview he granted to newsmen.

“So, in the circumstance, I just interpreted everything and said they have done the right thing by guaranteeing more of our rights under Section 38 of the Constitution that gives Nigerians the freedom of thought, conscience, and religion from that decision that female students can wear hijab because it is the mode of their worship and any attempt to stop them from wearing it amounts to a violation of their fundamental right. I said, ‘It is good!’

“So, I said I need to also be appearing in my religious attire of worship because it is good for man to be with God all the time. This is my mode henceforth.”

Omirhobo said he will encourage others to wear their religious attires to work, expressing gratitude to the Supreme Court for the ruling.

“My children will go to school like this. I will encourage my relations, my friends; those in the army; those in the police; those in the Navy; doctors; lawyers; they will dress in their mode of worship,” the Delta-born added. “I am very grateful to the Supreme Court. I am very happy about this.”

Okay.ng recalls that the Supreme Court had given a ruling on 16th June, granting female Muslim students in Government-owned schools the right to wear Hijab as part of a guarantee of Freedom of Religious Thought & Conscience guaranteed by Section 38 of the 1999 Constitution.

Google News

Stay connected via Google.

Add Okay News as a preferred source for faster follow-through coverage.

Preferred sourceAdd on Google
Advertisement

About the author

Advertisement
Stay with Okay News

Follow the report beyond this story

Follow Okay News across the channels and tools you use most.

ChannelFollow on WhatsAppDirect story alerts, sharper updates, and easier sharing with your circle.Preferred sourceAdd on GoogleFollow Okay News updates across Google surfaces.Visual briefingsFollow on InstagramVisual updates, clips, and newsroom highlights.Reader appGet the appRead Okay News on your mobile device.