Machine summary:
Turning to Nigeria, the author argues in a highly polemical language that the country's print media is dominated by Yoruba Christians who conspire to mount propaganda against Islam and to use their influence to deny fair representation of Muslims in the headship of national institutions.
This conclusion might not withstand interrogation, given the author's earlier argument that Christianity endorses the separation of Church and State, and that this religion declined in Europe when secularism became a practical reality.
In any case, Ado-Karuwas position enables him to defend the current public adoption of Sharia law by several states in northern Nigeria, arguing that this is meant to redress the marginalization of Islamic law.
He dismisses arguments by Kayode Eso, a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Nigeria, that the country's constitution limits Sharia to personal law and that the expansion of the Sharia to cover criminal cases amounts to adopting a state religion.