Wake Up, Nigerians are Losing Hope in You - Nigerian Catholic Bishops Sends Message to Buhari
Bishops
of Catholic Church have warned President Muhammadu Buhari that
Nigerians are loosing hope on his promised 'change' to turn things
around which he pledged before he took over power.
President Buhari and Catholic Priests at Aso Rock few months ago
In an official statement issued at the end of a conference in
Akure, the Ondo state capital on Thursday, Bishops of the Catholic
Church of Nigeria, warned President Muhammadu Buhari that he is “frittering away the high hopes” that Nigerians “invested in his resolve to turn things around”.
The bishops who commented on some of the challenges in the country,
urged the president not to dismiss the call for restructuring, adding
that he should pay close attention to the “strong” allegations of
nepotism levelled against him.
“We call on our president to wake up to the fact that most
Nigerians are today disillusioned by the frittering away of the high
hopes which they invested in his resolve to turn things around.
“The president can no longer safely ignore the very strong
allegations of a rise in nepotism and sectionalism in federal
appointments. This has further deepened the feelings of alienation and
the rise of centrifugal forces that are threatening the foundations of
our unity.
“One-sided appointments into public office have displayed a
tendency towards a form of sectionalism that we have found difficult to
associate with the high moral credentials of the president. A hurricane
of violence by herdsmen and other agents of death has left in its wake a
landscape of blood and destruction.
“Political violence, corruption, kidnappings, armed robbery,
ritual murders and all ills of the past, are still very much present and
we seem to be progressively sinking deeper into the mud. Our people are
now ravaged by disease and hunger. The result is the rise in the curve
of violence both by the state agents and non-state actors among our own
people.
“We wish to state firmly that the debate about the
restructuring of our country should not be seen as an act of rebellion
or as a call for division. It should rather be seen as an expression of
our people’s desire that the political class return to the fine
principles of democracy such as true federalism, negotiation and
consensus building as means of achieving a more equitable distribution
of the resources of our country,” the statement read.
The Catholic bishops recalled how the president promised to be fair to all, in the buildup to the election.
“We recall that in his address to us, the Catholic Bishops of
Nigeria, on 11 February 2015, General Buhari, as a presidential
candidate, stated among other things: ‘Government has no business
preferring one religion to the other.
“The role of government is to protect lives and properties of
citizens and to respect and protect their constitutional rights. One
critical right that every government must seek to protect is the right
of citizens to exercise their respective faiths, Christians and Muslims
or others, in a lawful manner without fear or hindrance and to prosecute
those who use religion as an excuse to destroy homes, schools, and
places of worship. When governments fail in that duty, they must then
assist in the rebuilding of the structures including destroyed places of
worship and giving full restitution to property’.
“As things now stand, most Nigerians do not see a government
committed to attaining these stated objectives. Furthermore, we find the
calls for the expansion of the scope of Sharia law in public life at
variance with the letter and spirit of the Nigerian Constitution,” part of the statement read.
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