• Ex-Prelate seeks
action on 2014 confab report
• Urges dialogue to end Niger Delta crisis.
• Urges dialogue to end Niger Delta crisis.
Ondo State Governor
Olusegun Mimiko has appealed to Catholic bishops to join the call for Nigeria’s
restructuring so as to reflect the needed true federalism, saying it
is the only panacea for the growth and development of the country.
Governor Mimiko with a cross section of Catholic Bishops at the Akure confab. |
Mimiko, who stated
this at the second plenary session of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria
(CBCN) 2016 at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church, Akure, said government had a
responsibility to curtail religious bigotry in the country and urged religious
leaders to continue to pray for the nation.
He noted that the
problem of corruption facing Nigeria could be addressed with the right policy
in place, affirming that inter-religious conflicts would only lead the country
into more dangers that might be difficult to overcome.
“Government has
responsibility of bringing these bigots to book. We are not comfortable with
what the bigots are doing. What they are doing is most worrisome in Nigeria.
Church has major role to play by praying for Nigeria,” the governor said.
Mimiko, who charged
churches to always stand up when they see abuse of the secularity in Nigeria,
commended the Catholic Bishops in Nigeria for what they have been standing for
in Nigeria.
The president of
CBCN, Most Rev Ignatius Kaigama, has lauded the co-operation between the
church and Ondo State government.
Kaigama stressed
that the Mimiko-led administration has brought smiles to the faces of the
people through the provision of good roads, infrastructural development,
quality healthcare and urban renewal, among others.
He, however, said
that a lot should be done by the Federal Government to alleviate the current
economic hardship on the masses and that the country should not be ruled with
sentiments.
Kaigama, who
advocated an all-inclusive governance in a bid to fast-track national
development, said various issues confronting Nigeria had been raised with
President Muhammadu Buhari when the bishops visited him last May with
assurances that he would act soon.
Also, the Prelate
Emeritus of Methodist Church Nigeria (MCN), His Eminence, Dr. Sunday Mbang, has
expressed displeasure at the decision by the Federal Government to jettison
2014 National Conference report, saying some of the recommendations hold the
solution to the country’s contemporary problems, including righting the
foundational lapses of Nigeria’s nationhood.
“I was not happy
when President Buhari says the report of the National Conference set up by the
immediate past government should not be looked into. Read it, look at it, those
you don’t like, tell everybody you don’t like this. But for you to come and say
I won’t look at it, I don’t think this is a way forward for the nation.
Definitely, this
country needs some kind of restructuring,” he stated.
Addressing
reporters at the weekend during an occasion to mark his 80th birthday in Eket,
Akwa Ibom State, the former outspoken national chairman of the Christian
Association of Nigeria (CAN) condemned the militarisation of the Niger Delta,
noting that the move was counter-productive.
Mbang rather
submitted that dialogue was much potent than military might in the present
circumstance.
“The truth is that
you cannot use force to settle issues. To make sense, I would prefer dialogue.
Have they fully explored dialogue to warrant use of military? He queried.
·
This post was syndicated
from The Guardian Nigeria.
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