Tag: Bishops

  • Bishops, ex-Speakers, lawyers suggest way out of economic challenges

    Bishops, ex-Speakers, lawyers suggest way out of economic challenges

    Catholic bishops, former Speakers of Houses of Assembly, and lawyers have expressed concerns about the spiraling rise in the cost of living across the country.

    They suggested some immediate and long-term solutions to the trend.

    The bishops spoke at the opening session of this year’s First Plenary Assembly of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) at the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria Resource Centre, Durumi, Abuja.

    President of the CBCN, Most Rev. Lucius Iwejuru Ugorji, said the reform agenda of the present administration has added to the plight of the citizens.

    He noted that with the end of the fuel subsidy regime and the unification of the foreign exchange market, there has been a significant increase in the pump price of petroleum products and a steep decline in the value of the naira.

    “The reform agenda of the present government has added to the plight of Nigerians. With the withdrawal of fuel subsidies and the unification of the foreign exchange market, there has been a sharp increase in the pump price of petroleum products and a steep decline in the value of the naira. Indeed, there is a free fall in the national currency.

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    “As a result of the government’s reform agenda, millions of Nigerians have been reduced to a life of grinding poverty, wanton suffering, and untold hardship as never before in our national history.

    “In a bid to survive, an increasing number of the poor have resorted to begging. With more than 80 million Nigerians living below the poverty line of less than two dollars a day, our country, according to the recent disclosure of the World Bank, is the world’s second-largest poor population after India.

    “While many impoverished Nigerians continue to suffer and die as a result of the hardship caused by the government’s economic reforms, the president has continued to urge the populace to make even more and more sacrifices with the assurance that brighter days lay ahead,” Ugorji said.

    The former Speakers across the country spoke after a meeting in Yola, the Adamawa State capital.

    They recommended price control mechanism for commodities to stop rising price hikes.

    The ex-Speakers, who met under the aegis of Conference of Former Speakers of State Houses of Assembly of Nigeria, also suggested that there should be subsidies for essential commodities to reduce hardship.

    The former speakers were led by the immediate past Plateau State Governor Simon Bako Lalong at the Banquet Hall of the Government House in Yola.

    They called for quick actions to get Nigeria out of the prevailing challenges.

    A communiqué issued at the end of the meeting reads: “Understanding the burden placed on citizens due to the rising cost of living, concerted efforts should be made to mitigate inflationary pressures through effective price control mechanisms, subsidies for essential commodities, and social welfare programs targeting vulnerable populations.”

    Signed by Lalong, the communiqué urged the government to improve infrastructure, particularly in transportation and energy sectors, to reduce the cost of goods and services.

    Also, the lawyers urged President Bola Tinubu to urgently set up a Price Control Board to avert further price increases across the markets to reduce the hardship Nigerians are facing.

    In a statement yesterday, the lawyers, through their National Convener, Mrs. Abibat Bankole-Apena, noted that such a board work work in line with the extant provisions of Price Control Act, 2004.

    “The main function of the board is to regulate how service providers fix prices of goods and services and curb arbitrary and outrageous charges by greedy business owners,” the statement said.

    “This is important at this auspicious time in view of the shocking ways prices of major commodity goods and services are skyrocketing within days in Nigeria and the untold hardship this is causing to Nigerian masses,” the statement added.

  • PEPT: Group cautions Catholic Bishops against anti-Tinubu campaign

    PEPT: Group cautions Catholic Bishops against anti-Tinubu campaign

    Activists, under the aegis of Social Rehabilitation Gruppe (SRG), have taken the Catholic Bishops to the cleaners over what they described as it unwarranted tirade against the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal (PEPT) upholding the victory of President Bola Tinubu in the February 25 presidential election.

    A statement by the group’s Convener/National Coordinator, Dr. Marindoti Oludare, condemned the clerics’ position as an unwarranted wish that Nigerians who voted in the Presidential election should have been disenfranchised based on the inability of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to post election results via Internet server.

    Oludare, a Nigeria-born United States-based medical practitioner who’s also a Catholic, averred that the argument of the clergymen defied logic.

    “After reading the message by some Catholic bishops on the PEPT judgement, I must say as a Catholic ‘boy’ that I was disappointed in the fact that My Lord Bishops will go against the ruling of the Lordships at the PEPT without care for rhyme and reason.

    “The statement seems to seek to disenfranchise Nigerians based on the inability of INEC to post copies of election-recording documents on a server.

    “Had My Lords educated themselves about the way the internet works, they would have known better than to suggest electronic copies of documents hold more legitimacy than the real-source document, which is the form EC8a; where the election results are recorded.

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    “It’s like my Lords wore a religious shade that cast a hue of bias to their perspective,” he appraised.

    According to him, there is a reason the whole American electoral system is not in anyway connected to the internet, and that when they do electronic voting, there is a paper backup, and the process is not connected to the internet.

    “This is because the internet is simply put, a group of multiple computers talking to one another, meaning, the external access exposes it to phishing, spamming and manipulations.

    “Hence, I can send a message online and that message gets replaced within seconds before it gets to its destination.”

    Oludare also pointed out that despite the American electoral system not being connected to the internet, former President Donald Trump and his supporters cried foul and even invaded the seat of government, stating that had the results been connected to the internet, that would have opened room for a floodgate of allegations, speculations and mischief.

    He contended further that the decision by the INEC to include a result viewing portal was an unforced error that the body had used to smear the cleanest, freest and fairest election in the electoral body’s history.

    “Can the bishops be said to have tested the claims that they seem to agree with, before holding on to their own version of truth? The books of Proverbs 13:16: states, ‘Every prudent man acts out of knowledge’.

    “Are my Lords claiming to be more knowledgeable about the law than the Lordships of the PEPT? Do they truly care about the truth? What is best for the country? or they only care about a ticket with a Christian on it?

    “Trying to impugn the Supreme Court before the case is brought before it by suggesting they could remotely be biased or that the PEPT was influenced, is a low bar that the Catholic bishops should be above,” he counselled.

    He also stated that the PEPT delivered a non-controversial judgement based on the letter of the law, stressing that the candidates never claimed to have won the election.

    “So in what ways did the failure to transmit the election assail the credibility of the process? Did any party agent present at the polling unit claim the result announced at their polling unit was different from what INEC announced, and if so, to what magnitude has such altered the result of the election?”

    “My call is to the members of the media that, if political parties can have enough polling agents to cover every polling unit, then members of the fourth estate of the realm can also have enough reporters to cover the same.

    “So we get real time reporting on events at every polling unit and INEC needs to trust itself and jettison the ill-considered iREV portal; otherwise, it will always lead to crisis, be a target of cyber-attacks.”

  • Anglican Church consecrates new Bishops, urges steadfastness

    Anglican Church consecrates new Bishops, urges steadfastness

    The Archbishop, Metropolitan and Primate of all Nigeria, Most Reverend Henry C. Ndukuba has urged Christians and the newly consecrated Archbishops, Bishops and the new Dean to stand firm in their faith.

    After a successful Episcopal Synod at the Basilica of Grace Anglican Church, Abuja on Tuesday 6th June 2023, Primate Ndukuba announced the election of four new bishops to fill vacant seats. They are two newly elected Archbishops for Lagos and Kaduna Provinces and the Dean-elect of the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion.

    Dr. Ndukuba who is the Primate, Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, gave the charge on Sunday during the consecration of two Archbishop, four Bishops and the Dean of the communion at the Archbishop Vining Memorial Cathedral, Diocese of Lagos West, Anglican Communion, Lagos.

    Those consecrated were the Venerable Collins Babalola for Ajayi Crowther Diocese; the Venerable Festus Nwafili for Ndokwa Diocese; The Venerable Ifedola Okupevi for Lagos Diocese and The Venerable Ebenezer Saiki for Akoko-Edo Diocese; Dean-Elect, The Most Rev’d Dr. Blessing Enyindah, the two Archbishop-Elects; the Most Rev’d Dr. Michael Fape of Remo Diocese for Lagos Province and, The Rt. Rev’d Timothy Yahaya of Kaduna Diocese for Kaduna Province.

    “We thank God for the gift of the ministry of the church of God. The ministry of the church is for all believers, mission of the church is for all believers but God usually calls people out of the believers to be servants, leaders, teachers and people who will represent him in nurturing the people so that everybody will do effectively what God has called us to do.

    “Because of that, we believe that God has raised these ministers of God called to be Bishops who we have consecrated today and we thank God for their lives. We are encouraging them to stand firm in their faith, hold onto their faith and word of God and continually nurture themselves and all God’s people with the truth of the word of God and the Sacraments of our new covenant in Christ Jesus,” Ndukuba said.

    Also speaking at the colourful event which attracted dignitaries including Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, who was represented by his wife, Dr. Ibijoke; Primate of West Africa Anglican, Ghana Rev. Cyril Benson; Primate of African Church Julius Appeh and others, former Archbishop of Ibadan Diocese, The Most Rev’d Dr. Joseph Akinfenwa expressed trust in God that the new Bishops will lead the people in the fear of God with knowledge and understanding.

    Dr. Akinfenwa also charged the new bishops to be merciful to all and defend those who have no helpers, saying the new Bishops should see their new roles as an additional responsibility in the Lord’s vineyard and not as a promotion.

    Read Also: We’re fully opposed to same-sex marriage, says Anglican Church

    He charged all of them to be truthful and sincere in all their dealings and be steadfast in the propagation of the gospel.

    Earlier in her address, Sanwo-Olu noted that it was the first time an Egun man was taking the mantle of Archbishopship in the church.  

    She, therefore, called on the newly consecrated servants of God to know that a “consecrated person is a life totally sold out to God, and to serve the Lord’s interest on earth, as well as full commitment to God and His church”.

    Sanwo-Olu urged them to uphold the vision, mission of our Lord Jesus, and be shining light to the communities and dioceses where they find themselves and finish their quota well.

  • Okorocha’s, Bishop’s row deepens

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has said he has done nothing to pitch the Catholic Church against the All Progressives Congress (APC), as alleged by Director-General of the Voice of Nigeria (VON), Osita Okechukwu.

    The governor insisted that he has shown love and respect for the Archbishop of Owerri Catholic Diocese, Rev. Anthony Obinna and “has no problem of any kind with the Catholic Church”.

    He donated N100 million for the completion of the Okigwe Catholic Diocese Cathedral.

    Okechukwu accused Okorocha of pitting the Church against the APC, apparently following the governor’s statement that Rev. Obinna cannot install a governor of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in 2019.

    A statement by Okorocha’s Chief Press Secretary Sam Onwuemeodo said: “The Director General of Voice of Nigeria (VON), Mr. Osita Okechukwu, accused Governor Rochas Okorocha of pitting the Catholic Church against APC without explaining how he arrived at such claim.

    “Okechukwu is one of those who believe that the only way they can grow in APC is by attacking Governor Okorocha, and he has been doing it religiously without any response from us.

    “Okorocha has shown love and respect to Archbishop Obinna, and has no problem of any kind with the Catholic Church. What Okorocha has done for the Catholic Diocese of Owerri, no past governor, whether civilian or military, has done. Let anybody say it is not true. And if Mr. Okechukwu had participated or followed events in the 2015 election, he would have understood better.

    “Don’t forget that President Muhammadu Buhari got only 14,157 votes in Enugu State, where the DG comes from, and 133,253 in Imo, not minding that Imo was the target of the PDP-led Federal Government’s onslaught.

    “If the governor didn’t mean well, he would not have taken President Buhari to the archbishop. But two days after that visit, the Leader newspaper, owned by the archbishop, had a headline: Alhaji in Government House. The name Okoro-Hausa also came from the same source.

    “And if the campaign of the PDP and a section of the Church that Buhari and Rochas would Islamise the Southeast if APC wins didn’t get to Enugu State, it means the party’s presence in the state was never considered a threat. But in Imo, that was the major campaign.

    “Mr. Okechukwu won’t understand because he was contended with his much-talked about relationship with the President. In case Okechukwu never heard, the governor took an oath at Assumpta Cathedral, during the 2015 campaign, that he won’t help to Islamise the country and that he is not a member of Ogboni.

    “Yet, the attacks intensified. When the governorship debate organised by the Church was disrupted, they accused Rochas, who had not arrived the venue then, of sponsoring it.

    “We are appealing that the archbishop show love to Okorocha and appreciate his good work. And for those who think the governor is their problem, they should not bother as the 2019 election will settle all these bloated egos.”

  • Catholic bishops confront Buhari over performance

    Catholic bishops confront Buhari over performance

    Govt tackling challenges, says SGF Mustapha

    Catholic cleric John Cardinal Onaiyekan yesterday lashed out at the Federal Government over its performance.

    But two government officials disagreed with the man of God. Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Boss Mustapha agreed that there were challenges, which he said the government was tackling.

    Besides, Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed said Nigeria is in safe hands, with President Muhammadu Buhari in the driver’s seat.

    The Metropolitan Catholic Archbishop of Abuja said Nigerians deserved better governance.

    Cardinal  Onaiyekan, in a homily delivered at the opening Mass of the first 2018 plenary of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria (CBCN), said the nation had slipped to the verge of misery.

    The clergyman said in the last three years, Nigerians had been hearing a lot about change, but got little of it.

    In Cardinal  Onaiyekan’s view, any change in human affairs must necessarily start with a change of heart.

    But Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Boss Mustapha who represented President Muhammadu Buhari, said the government had done its best to address the issues affecting Nigerians.

    Mustapha said the CBCN was the only Christian platform that gave the president a listening ear prior to the 2015 presidential election.

    Mustapha added that the president believed that the CBCN is a strategic partner in building the nation and noted that it has a lot to offer the nation.

    “And for that reason, he remains eternally grateful. And I remember at that engagement, they asked very pertinent questions – direct, bullets to the face. And he provided answers. And because of that reason, he believes that the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria is a strategic partner in the enterprise of growing the Nigeria nation and he believes that they have a lot to offer,” Mustapha said.

    He cited the recent visit of the Catholic bishops to the president and said he was giving the issues they raised priority attention.

    He said the government was on its toes, addressing security challenges. Perpetrators of violent crimes will be made to face the law as the Federal Government is taking measures to stem the tide of insecurity, Boss said.

    Cardinal Onaiyekan said:  ”We do well therefore to remind ourselves of our need for repentance in the way we think, in the things that we do, in our entire attitude to life in ourselves and in our relations with all our neighbours. But this is not only for us who are Christians and Catholics. It is for all men and women of our nation in this era of general confusion and near chaos, anarchy and doom.

    “Yes, our nation is in a state of uncertainty and confusion. A few things are going well in the society and the economy for which we thank God and congratulate our leaders. They tell us that they are doing their best. But a lot still needs to be done and too many problems have been left to fester. Our nation surely deserves far better than it is now getting in terms of good governance, social justice and peace and minimum of well being for our people,” Cardinal Onaiyekan said.

    He recalled that the Buhari administration came into power three years ago with a promise to change Nigeria for better in all aspects, adding that having tried the two major political parties and found neither of them up to the nation’s expectation, the nation is on the verge of despair.

    The former President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) said so far the government had spent so much time and energy demonising its predecessor that it seemed to have forgotten its promise of a better life for Nigerians.

    “It has, unfortunately, allowed the initial massive goodwill it enjoyed to be depleted, almost to non-existence. It is no wonder that many Nigerians are looking for a new political organisation that can truly bring about genuine change for the better. Having tried our two major political parties and found none of them up to our expectation, the nation is on the verge of despair,” Cardinal Onaiyekan added.

    He said irrespective of the situation, Nigerians must not allow despair and frustration to overwhelm them, noting that the

    “Another election is fast approaching. We must seize this God-given opportunity to radically change things around. We should no longer allow politics to remain business as usual in the hands of the same gang of speculators and opportunists. We must change the rule of the game, not the faces of the players.

    “Politics is not for miserable people seeking a way out of poverty, nor for selfish business people looking for an easy way to maximise profit by manipulating the system in their favour. Less still is it for the corruptly rich-seeking refuge from just accountability. Rather, it is for altruistic men and women with the talent, conviction and desire to contribute to making our nation a better home for all of us.

    “We must therefore recover the genuine sense of politics as a noble vocation to serve the common good. Nigerians should stop complaining and get involved in the often rough arena of politics. It is only then that a new kind of politics as service to the people will emerge and real change for the better will be achieved.

    The President of the CBCN, Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama, told the congregation that the Church’s sermon was not borne out of ill-will, but because the Church wants things to be good for the nation and that when the Church preaches, it is telling the government to go and re-strategise.

    Rev. Kaigama said the Church was not speaking in a disrespectful way, or because it wants to attack or demonise or bring down anybody.

    “We want to inspire you, let you know like John the Baptist, to go and tell authority that this is what is needed, this is what we at the grassroots are saying. When you take it like that, you will even do better.

    “But when you take it with a negative mind, you say, ‘oh, these people hate us, the Catholic Church don’t like us, they attack us all the time’. For God’s sake, if you listen to us, to all we have been saying, our communiqués from 1960 to date have been dealing with social issues and how to improve Nigeria,” Rev. Kaigama said.

    Former Abia State Governor Orji Uzor Kalu maintained that the Buhari administration had done well, particularly in infrastructural development.

    Kalu mentioned the Second Niger Bridge; Enugu-Onitsha Expressway; Enugu-Port Harcourt-Okigwe; Aba-Umuahia Expressway. He said the president was doing everything within his power to salvage the economy.

    Speaking with reporters, Kalu prayed for the good of the country and wished Nigerians well, that they can enjoy the dividends of democracy.

    He said the APC had only been in government for just three years, adding that another party had been in power for 16 years.

    Kalu added that going by the infrastructural development of the APC-led government, the party was on top gear, even as he concluded that the APC has done a lot in three years.

    “This is not media hype. I am not a spokesman for the president. Everybody knows that I speak the truth. APC has done very well. I will take a look at my own side of Nigeria. The Second Niger Bridge is being constructed now; Enugu-Onitsha Expressway is being built now on a very high thickness; Enugu-Port Harcourt-Okigwe; Aba-Umuahia Expressway is on top speed. So, to me, we are on top gear. And other places I have gone, the roads are being constructed,” Kalu said.

    Also at the Mass were All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman John Odigie-Oyegun and his wife, Victoria; Minister of Foreign Affairs Geoffrey Onyeama; Minister of Science and Technology Ogbonnaya Onu; Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Audu Ogbeh.

    Former Senate President David Mark and wife Helen; Plateau State Governor Simon Lalong; Apostolic Nuncio to Nigeria Most Revd Antonio Filipazzi; President of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Revd Samson Ayokunle; German Ambassador to Nigeria, Dr Bernhard Stephen Schlagneck and Primate of the Methodist Church of Nigeria Dr Samuel Emeka Kanu Uche, among others.

  • Buhari and the Bishops: Let the frank talk continue

    These are very challenging times for Nigeria and Nigerians. And if there is one man who should feel the pinch more than the rest of us, it is President Muhammadu Buhari, PMB, for short. Why, you would ask? Simple: Uneasy, the saying goes, lies the head that wears the crown.  Of course, he should have expected it. He is not an accidental president. Don’t forget that, unlike Julius Caesar who was entreated by the Romans to take the crown, PMB’s was by personal choice. Not only did he offer his head for the crown, he did so on four occasions, spanning a period of twelve years.

    PMB’s case reminds one of a story told about the late Dr. K.O. Mbadiwe, unarguably one of the most flamboyant politicians that passed through these climes; the man who had the audacious dexterity to twist the English language in a manner that defied the adroitness of even Nobel winners in English. When reminded that uneasy laid the head that wore the crown and that he should tread gently in the pursuit of his political ambition, K.O. was reported to have blurted out: “Place the crown on my head, let me bother about the weight!” That was quintessentially the magisterial K.O. the coiner of jargons like men of “timber and calibre”, of “caterpillar and bulldozer”, the ambassador extra-ordinary and plenipotentiary of the Second Republic!

    With politicians like K.O, Maitama Sule, M.K.O. Abiola, Ibrahim Tahir and Chuba Okadigbo, the political space never had a dull moment. They had a way of making even the most contentious disagreements look like friendly contests, the end of which left little or no bitterness. They had the uncanny ability to tell someone to go to hell, and the person would proceed gladly. But those days are gone. Today, tempers rise at the shortest provocation and political gladiators throw verbal scuds that rip through the psyche and short fuses of opponents with unquenchable anger.

    That is why the recent meeting between the Catholic bishops and President Muhammadu Buhari should be defrocked of the antagonistic garb in which some commentators and political opportunists have tried to dress it, in a bid to pigeon-hole it into a preconceived narrative, thereby fuelling the climate of disharmony. I am an ardent Catholic. I know that the real Catholic cleric is a forthright messenger of God who fears neither man nor the elements. I also know that Catholic clerics are humble, respectful and peaceful people who shun the limelight. I suspect that if the Bishops had their way, they would have preferred a quiet visit to the President, away from the klieg lights, unnoticed by news hounds and angry politicians baying for the blood of their compatriots.

    That is why it is important to place the visit in its proper context. First, the bishops showed predictable maturity by taking advantage of the access they had to the President. It would have been totally out of character if they had taken to the streets or any other public forum when they could look the man in the face, eye-ball to eye ball and tell him the unvarnished truth. And the truth, they told him. They told him that all was not well, that people were suffering. They commended him for the degradation of Boko Haram but wondered why his stoic resolve against terror was failing him in the area of the herdsmen/farmers crisis; they reminded him that his constituency was all of Nigeria and that the feeling of alienation by some groups needed to be addressed in appointments to political offices.

    From the photographs of the event, you did not need anybody to tell you that there were tense moments; but it was also obvious that there was mutual respect. That is the way it should be. Did the bishops achieve any results? It is too early in the day to conclude. But a few things have happened to suggest that PMB actually learnt some lessons from the frank talks. By the same token, going by their confessions to some of their friends in government, it will appear that the bishops equally learnt some lessons by the visit.

    Therefore, it is apposite to conclude that some of the instantaneous visible changes were the salutary effects of the frank talks. For instance, at the diplomatic level, two days after their visit, the Papal Nuncio, that is, the Vatican’s ambassador to Nigeria, was able to present his letters of credence. Why he could not do so for over three months is open to question but it needs be observed that it is not unusual for such accreditation to await certain clarifications. For another, the presidency issued a mild but reassuring rebuttal of the accusation that PMB was indifferent to the insecurity posed by the herdsmen crisis. For once, PMB who is not given to brandishing his antecedents reminded Nigerians that he had been in the theater of battle and that, during his time in the military, commanded three out of the four divisions of the Nigerian Army, at the time in Lagos, Jos and Ibadan. That’s not a swagger; it was like saying: “trust me, I know what to do, I know what I am doing”. What one deduces from that is that PMB felt sufficiently concerned by the visit of the Bishops that he decided that a response was appropriate. Actually, there are speculations that PMB felt so concerned that he confidently leaked to the bishops some inner security issues he believed were not for public consumption as these could inflame passions and lead to escalation of tensions.

    Now this: All along, the attitude of PMB and his aides had been to shrug off any accusation of lopsidedness in appointments. But in a marked departure from the trend, PMB assured the bishops that he would look into their complaint about lopsided appointments, perhaps now that people who are not prone to telling lies or making statements to score cheap political points have weighed into the matter. What I deduce from this is that, upon reflection, it is beginning to dawn on the President that there is need to address the feeling of alienation and exclusion. To be sure, one area where the stark lopsidedness stares everyone in the face is the exclusion of the south east from headship of any of the nation’s security agencies. That wouldn’t be considered fair, by any standard. Such exclusion only strengthens the argument and, perhaps, the resolve, of those who are regarded as trouble makers. Now, it is possible that hierarchically, the system cannot find anybody of sufficient rank, from the south east, to fill the quota of the zone.

    If that were to be the case, the nation is not devoid of precedents to fall back to. I am told of the dilemma faced by the military following the unfortunate assassination of former Head of State, General Murtala Mohammed on February 13, 1976. With General Matthew Olusegun Obasanjo, OBJ, succeeding him as head of state, the natural thing was for the next most senior officer, in the person of Lt-General T.Y. Danjuma, to take over from OBJ as Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters. But the tension in the army wouldn’t allow for such indiscretion as both OBJ and Danjuma are Christians while Murtala Mohammed was a Moslem. What did the military do? They fished out an officer who, though junior in rank, fit the political profile enunciated by the kingmakers. That was how then Colonel Shehu Musa Yar’Ardua was overnight promoted to Brigadier-General to become second in command as Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters. What that showed was that the military, when challenged, could be trusted to exhibit the required political sensibilities to drive the process of nation building and political stability. We are not in a military government but the president, as commander-in-chief, can make necessary adjustments aimed at addressing the issue of diversity. In this, he has the full weight of Section 14, sub-section 3 of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to support any action he takes to achieve an inclusive arrangement.

    For the avoidance of doubt, here is the provision of Section 14, Sub-section 3 of the constitution, otherwise known as the “Federal Character Principle”: The composition of the Government of the Federation or any of its agencies and the conduct of its affairs shall be carried out in such a manner to reflect the federal character of Nigeria and the need to promote national unity, and also to command national loyalty thereby ensuring that there shall be no predominance of persons from a few states or from a few ethnic or other sectional groups in that government or in any of its agencies”.

    In not so many words, the bishops conveyed to PMB the need to re-enact the political sagacity and flexibility of the past; that the polity is usually more stable when leaders show greater understanding of the complex reality of the pluralities that define our unity in diversity. One more example will suffice: confronted with a similar crisis after the 1979 general elections, the victorious National Party of Nigeria (NPN) went into an alliance with the Nigerian People’s Party (NPP), to stabilize the polity. Granted that the alliance collapsed after sometime, it no doubt provided some breathing space to re-engineer the political architecture of the country hence allowing President Shehu Shagari’s administration the leeway to record some landmark achievements.

    The bishops’ visit also showed that given a different approach, a sober PMB can come out of his shell and reveal his real position on issues. Arising from that visit, the usually taciturn PMB stated unequivocally that land was reposed in state governments; that it was never the intention of the Federal Government to impose “colonies” on the states. And so, it became unequivocally clear that the issue of opening up livestock development centres or group of ranches to make up what is called agric colonies is completely at the discretion of the state governors.

    What emerges from the meeting between PMB and the bishops is that much can be achieved when deliberations are not adumbrated by subterranean political motives. After all, there wasn’t much difference between the message of the bishops and those of former Presidents’ Olusegun Obasanjo and Ibrahim Babangida and of late, Wole Soyinka except that in the case of the earlier two, there was the hint of magisterial inquisition and, I regret to say, denigration of the personality of the President. Again, by publicly admonishing him not to run for a second term, the two great Nigerians had exposed themselves, rightly or wrongly, to the charge of partisanship and political high-handedness, and, if you may, denial of the fundamental right of the President.

    It is only proper that the bishops should be commended for the visit to PMB. The President in turn deserves to be commended for not only giving a listening ear to the bishops but setting out to immediately address the issues raised. We commend their maturity, forthrightness and candour to all those who genuinely seek a resolution of the current national imbroglio. More of such interactions are required at all levels as we navigate the twists and turns of nation-building, in the hope that, ultimately, some consensus can be reached on how to guarantee the peaceful co-existence and prosperity of all Nigerians irrespective of ethnic group, belief system, gender or age.

    Finally, it goes without saying that PMB cannot be expected to be a perfect human being. Like every mortal, he makes his mistakes. But that does not lend him culpable for the indiscretions of the past many years nor should that deny him his right to run for a second term. As a Catholic, I am satisfied that the bishops did not arrogate to themselves the prerogative of dictating the President’s political life. That is solely in the hands of God who, if PMB decides to run, will speak through the people, at the ballot box.

  • Bishops to politicians: have fear of God

    Politicians have been urged to serve the nation with the fear of God to earn a reward on earth and in heaven.

    The former Prelate, Methodist Church of Nigeria, His Eminence Sunday Ola Makinde and the Presiding Bishop, Calvary Life Assembly, Bishop Ransom Bello, gave the advice during their sermons at the wake and funeral of Mrs. Augusta Oladipo.

    Bello, who noted that the love of God facilitates excellence in service, urged those in positions of authority to serve the nation with the consciousness that they would die and give account of their stewardship in heaven.

    The Kano cleric congratulated the Presiding Bishop of The Sword of the Spirit Ministries, Bishop Wale Oke, on the good testimonies given of his late mother-in-law.

    He said: “The value of our contribution on earth is based on the fear of God.

    “Those who are given the privilege to govern us should know that they are put there by God.

    “They must do all they can to justify their positions by discharging their duties well and letting the people enjoy the nation’s wealth.”

    Makinde said life was transient and short, hence should be lived well to impact others.

    He expressed worries that many people are not preparing for death, which he described as a necessary end.

    His words: “Jesus has solved the problem of death and gave us assurance of eternal life. Are you preparing for death?

    “In heaven, there are no disease, hunger, poverty and no climate change. Let your life please God.”

    He urged the citizens to be conscious of the fact that they would give account of their stewardship in heaven.

    Oke thanked the dignitaries and well wishers for attending the event.

    At the ceremony were Bishop David Oyedepo of Living Faith Bible Church and his wife Faith, Bishop of Ibadan South Anglican Communion, Jacob Ajetunmobi, Apostle Sunday Popoola, Prophet Funsho Akande, Bishop Mike Bamidele and Bishop Thomas Aremu.

    Others were former Osun State Head of Service Elder Segun Akinwusi; bishops Chris Olisah, Akere Jude, Dapo Ogunsola and Rev Mrs Kunle Onawumi.

  • Catholic bishops decry high cost of governance

    Catholic Bishops in Nigeria have decried high cost of governance in the country, saying it is unjustifiable.

    They lamented a situation whereby enormous sums are paid to public office holders while a large percentage of the population lives in dehumanising poverty.

    The Catholic Bishops stated these in a communiqué they issued at the end of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) which took place at the Pastoral Centre, Igwuruta, Ikwerre Local Government Area of Rivers State.

    They also said that it is highly regrettable that legislators pass bills “in view of future pension benefits for themselves and members of the executive arm of government” without putting other workers into consideration.

    In the communiqué jointly signed by Most Rev. Ignatius Kaigama and Most Rev. William Avenya, President and Secretary respectively of CBCN, and released yesterday in Port Harcourt, they also condemned a situation “where so many workers are not paid the recommended basic salary and where massive decay of infrastructure has put much stress on the citizens and their lives in danger,” adding that this represents a gross injustice against the poor.

    While commending the initiative of some States in cutting the cost of governance, they also called on the Federal Government (FG) and other state governments to do the same for the betterment of the country.

    In the 10- point communiqué which Kaigama who is also the Archbishop of Jos and Avenya, the Bishop of Gboko signed on behalf of their colleagues, they noted that the Nigerian economy is in distress at the moment, thus making it difficult for many families to have their basic needs while unemployment, which they said is now beyond control, has made many citizens, especially the younger ones, to migrate locally and to other countries.

    In the course of this migration, they said, the people are exposed to inhuman conditions and other forms of immorality and criminality, thus making many young promising lives to be “wasted on our streets, in the deserts of some African countries and on the shores of Europe.”

    This, they said, is why they appreciate the desire of the government to re-invest in the agricultural sector and to seek other alternatives to oil and gas “which have fared very badly in recent past.”

    Continuing, they stated that “it is a welcome development that the present government has made the fight against corruption and insurgency central to its programme”, affirming that “the war against corruption is not just a battle for virtue and righteousness in our land but a fight for the soul and substance of our nation.”

    They further urged all Nigerians to transcend ethnic, religious, regional affiliations and sentiments and join hands in fighting against this malaise “in order that we may recover our wasted opportunities.

    While congratulating Nigerians on the peaceful 2015 general election, they also praised the Nigerian government and all security agencies on the achievements recorded so far in the fight against Boko Haram insurgency, noting that this has made it possible for the refugees and internally displaced persons to be returning to their homes gradually.

    On same sex-union, they expressed deep concern on the rising wave of this and used the opportunity to reiterate their “unreserved condemnation of all acts of homosexuality as sinful and opposed to the natural law of creation.”

    They therefore called on government to continue to resist the attempt by some external governments and agencies to impose an acceptance of same sex-sex unions and maintained that “persons with these orientations should be assisted pastorally, spiritually and psychologically, with respect for their dignity as human persons created in the image and likeness of God.”

  • Catholic bishops back Buhari’s anti-corruption battle

    Catholic bishops back Buhari’s anti-corruption battle

    President Muhammadu Buhari has got the backing of Catholic bishops for his anti-corruption crusade.

    The bishops urged Nigerians to cooperate with the Buhari Administration to ensure sanity in the polity by rejecting corruption.

    Acting under the aegis of Catholic Bishops Conference of Ibadan Ecclesiastical Province, comprising Ibadan Archdiocese, Ondo, Ilorin, Oyo, Ekiti and Osogbo dioceses, the clerics canvassed a “regime of justice and equity, where merits are respected and the rule of law exalted”.

    The call was made in a communique issued at the end of the second plenary meeting of the bishops held at the Jubilee Conference Centre, Oke-Ado, Ibadan, Oyo State from August 17 to 18.

    The communique, signed by the Most Rev. Gabriel Abegunrin  and the Most Rev. Felix Ajakaye, President and Secretary, with the theme “Choose today whom you will serve” was made available to reporters by Rev. Ajakaye in Ado-Ekiti on Wednesday.

    The bishops said: “We note the renewed hope for a new Nigeria generated in our country since the last general elections. We thank Almighty God for the relatively limited violence and bloodshed during the exercise.

    “We call on our compatriots to cooperate with the current administration to bring sanity back into our country by showing common determination to reject corruption, nepotism, favouritism and to enthrone in our country a regime of justice and equity, where merits are respected and the rule of law exalted.”

    Noting that the country had been recognised as one of the most religious in the world, the bishops said: “Our prayers can only truly be answered if we do the will of God as He has commanded.”

    Reiterating the Catholic Church’s unmitigated belief in the sanctity of human life and family life, the bishops emphasised the need for the government to ensure that lives are protected from conception to natural end.

    They said: “The society must do everything possible to facilitate the growth of family living as a way of promoting responsible parenthood, good upbringing of children and reducing juvenile delinquency.”

    Deploring youth involvement in violence, delinquency and sundry misdemeanour, the bishops challenged Catholic youth to strive to become credible agents of change and apostles of God’s mercy to families, the country and to the world through positive engagement with modern media and a deliberate commitment to good morals and behaviours.

  • Anglican bishops hail Okorocha for retaining deputy

    Anglican bishops hail Okorocha for retaining deputy

    Anglican bishops in Imo State have hailed Governor Rochas Okorocha for retaining his deputy, Prince Eze Madumere, as his running mate.

    They described the duo as a formidable team “that holds greater prospects for the state.”

    The clerics, who met the governor to discuss the issues affecting the state, said: “Madumere has worked hard and conducted himself well to deserve to be retained as the deputy governor.”

    The bishops, led by Archbishop Caleb Maduoma, also praised the governor’s landmark achievements and pleaded that the mission schools be released to their owners.

    Speaking on behalf of the League of Bishops, Rt. Rev. Bennett Okoro referred to the governor’s free education, massive infrastructural development, rural development, health sector reforms and security of life and property, adding that the achievements had deepened democratic culture.

    The issue of who would be Okorocha’s running mate was a subject of debate until after the display of candidates’ list by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    When the debate was on, the governor did not hide his preference for Madumere, whom he described as trustworthy.

    The religious leaders at the meeting were Archbishop Caleb Maduoma; Bishop of Orlu Diocese, Rt. Rev. Bennett Okoro; Bishop of Owerri Diocese, Rt. Rev. Cyril Okorocha; Bishop of Diocese on the Lake, Bishop C.B.N. Oti; Bishop of Diocese of Ohaji-Egbema, Rt. Rev. Chidi Oparajiaku and Bishop of Diocese of Oru, Rt. Rev. Godfrey Chukwunenye.

    Okorocha thanked the clergymen for their support, which he said encouraged his administration to achieve a lot in less than four years.