Tag: Gumi

  • I never said US was targeting me for attacks-Gumi

    I never said US was targeting me for attacks-Gumi

    Renowned Islamic scholar, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, has dismissed a viral report claiming  he was targeted during an alleged United States military attack on Nigerian soil as fake. 

    In a statement on his verified Facebook page, the cleric clarified that he never made such a claim and had never entertained the idea.

    “There is fake news going viral now that wrongly claims that I said I was targeted by the US attack on Nigerian soil, or something to that effect,” he said.

    Firmly refuting the report, Sheikh Gumi added: “I never said so, and I also never thought of such a possibility. I am comfortably staying in my home with my family without fear, intimidation, or apprehension.”

    He explained that the confusion may have stemmed from a lecture he delivered at a mosque, during which he narrated a past security incident involving the Boko Haram insurgent group.

    “I believe the source of misinterpretation was a lecture I gave in the mosque on how, in August 2012, I was told that Boko Haram had targeted me for elimination,” he stated.

    Read Also: Gumi and his bandit ‘neighbours’

    According to Sheikh Gumi, the planned attack failed after the assailants were killed by their own explosive device.

    “The two people who came to execute the plan were killed instantly when the bomb detonated in their hands near my house,” he said.

    He urged media organisations that carried the report to correct the misinformation.

    “I advise all news agencies that reported the fake news to publicly retract it and tender their apologies,” he added.

  • Gumi, Northern Christian Youths reject foreign military intervention

    Gumi, Northern Christian Youths reject foreign military intervention

    Prominent Islamic scholar, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, and the Northern Christian Youth Professionals (NCYP) have warned against foreign interference in Nigeria’s internal affairs, describing such moves as dangerous to national sovereignty.

    Gumi, in a statement on his official Facebook page, berated some Christian intellectuals for openly supporting foreign intervention, saying their action was “unpatriotic, shameful, and obnoxious.”

    He expressed disappointment that those he expected to show stronger patriotism, given the South’s advancement in Western education, appeared more inclined toward “subservience to Western powers.”

    According to him, the reactions by some southern Christians to recent comments and threats by former U.S. President Donald Trump reflected a “slave mentality” toward the West.

    The cleric argued that Nigeria’s internal conflicts, including herder-farmer clashes and indigenous-versus-settler crises, were products of poverty, poor education, moral decay, and bad governance, not religion.

    He condemned what he called the act of “inviting a liar, a genocidal supporter, a racist, a supremacist, and a colonist” to interfere in Nigeria on behalf of Christians, warning that such behavior could inflame national divisions.

    “Inviting a liar, a genocidal supporter, a racist, a supremacist, a colonist to interfere on the side of Christians specifically is unpatriotic, shameful, and obnoxious,” Gumi wrote. “Can’t they see that the fight will take another dimension?”

    While questioning whether such attitudes were driven by theological bias, Gumi said: “Is it their theological construct that makes them so naive and hateful? Unfortunately, the common denominator of these unpatriotic individuals is Islamophobia.”

    He, however, praised the majority of Christians in the country, describing them as “good Samaritans living peacefully with their Muslim countrymen,” and prayed: “May Allah protect us all from the Antichrist (Dajjal—the liar). Amin.”

    In a related development, the Northern Christian Youth Professionals (NCYP) urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to accelerate the implementation of the newly approved Forest Guard and State Police initiatives to strengthen internal security and prevent any justification for foreign military intervention.

    The group, in a statement by its Chairman, Isaac Abrak, said the Federal Government must demonstrate that Nigeria has the capacity to secure itself and manage its own affairs as a sovereign nation.

    Read Also: Between Gumi and Sowore

    NCYP described reports that the U.S. government, under Trump’s influence, was considering troop deployment to Nigeria as “unnecessary and counterproductive,” urging instead that America should support Nigeria through technical assistance, training, and intelligence sharing.

    The group recalled that the Forest Guard, approved by President Tinubu in May 2025, was a key element of his Renewed Hope Agenda to tackle violent groups in forests, but lamented the slow pace of implementation and the exclusion of local communities from the process.

    According to NCYP, community-driven recruitment, guided by traditional rulers and local leaders, would make the initiative more effective and sustainable, while providing employment for rural youths and strengthening national security.

    The organisation insisted that the Forest Guard and State Police represented Nigeria’s true answer to terrorism and insecurity, not foreign troops, emphasizing that “Nigeria can secure itself if its leaders act with sincerity, urgency, and national pride.”

  • Abubakar Gumi urges collective action to tackle Nigeria’s health, safety challenges

    Abubakar Gumi urges collective action to tackle Nigeria’s health, safety challenges

    The chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Safety Standards and Regulations, Sulaiman Abubakar Gumi, has said that Nigeria’s persistent safety challenges can be tackled successfully through collaborative efforts involving individuals, organizations, and communities.

    He disclosed this in his keynote address at the 2024 International Conference on Health, Safety, Security, and Environment (HSSE) held in Lagos, stating the importance of everyone playing a part in improving public safety.

    He highlighted the limitations of government agencies like the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) struggling to manage multiple crises, such as floods, banditry, and other emergencies. 

    “We cannot rely solely on the government,” Gumi stated. “If we all; individuals and corporate bodies treat safety as a collective responsibility, Nigeria will be much better off,” Gumi said. 

    The conference, now in its seventh edition, was organized by the World Safety Organization (WSO) Nigeria in partnership with the SafERR Global Institute (SGI) and SafERR Ambassadors Network Themed “Innovations in Public Safety, Emergency Management, and Environmental Sustainability,” the event focused on the latest safety practices and the urgent need for collaboration between stakeholders to develop local policies and standards.

    Speaking at the event, Soji Olalokun, Director of WSO Nigeria, stated the importance of safety advocacy.

    “Since 2012, we’ve been working to save lives by promoting public health and safety. This conference is not just about learning—it’s also about expanding your network and sharing knowledge with other professionals to make Nigeria safer,” he said.

    Similarly, Wilson Arikpo, Governor-General of the SafERR Global Ambassadors Network, emphasised the importance of practical safety training. “This year’s event is not just theoretical. We’re offering hands-on training, including CPR and fire management, to ensure everyone gains practical skills that can save lives,” Arikpo said. 

    He added that safety education should start at home. 

    “If every family member understands basic safety measures, our jobs as safety advocates become much easier.”

    Julius Akpong, Head of QHSE at Egbin Power PLC, echoed the call for preparedness. 

    “The primary goal of safety is prevention, but we must also be ready to respond when incidents occur,” Akpong explained. He stressed that being prepared can make the difference between life and death during an emergency.

    The event also included the induction of over 100 new members into the SafERR Ambassadors Network and the World Safety Organization. 

    These new inductees are expected to help promote safety awareness in their communities and workplaces. Fatimah Beyedugo, Corporate HSEQ Manager at International Energy Services Limited, shared her experience. 

    “Being a part of this organization means helping keep our workplaces and communities safe. My goal is to spread the message of safety wherever I go,” she said.

    Olaniyi Olayiwola, an electrical engineer and safety expert, spoke about the need for innovation in the safety sector. 

    “It’s time for Nigeria to adopt advanced safety technologies like artificial intelligence and virtual reality. 

    “These tools have already helped reduce accidents in other countries, and they can do the same here,” Olayiwola said. He called for the safety industry to embrace new technologies that can prevent accidents and save lives.

    The conference also celebrated key contributors to the field with an awards ceremony and the investiture of new SafERR Global Ambassadors. Gumi, and Yetunde Baderinwa, State Coordinator of National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Lagos, who represented Y.D. Ahmed, the Director-General of the NYSC, was conferred with Fellow titles for their outstanding contributions to safety standards and public health.

    The conference also featured an awards ceremony and the investiture of new SafERR ambassadors. Key individuals, including Sulaiman Gumi, the keynote speaker and Yetunde Baderinwa, Lagos State Coordinator of National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), were conferred with prestigious Fellow titles.

  • Call Gumi to order

    Call Gumi to order

    • His utterances are divisive and could compound our problems

    The World  Institute for Peace had given the Federal Government  seven days within which to arrest and question the famous Islamic cleric, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, to determine his level of involvement in the spate of insecurity that has reached an alarming stage in the country. The institute alleged that it is surprising that the Sheikh frequently makes very controversial statements against the military and other security agencies each time they carry out campaigns against the terrorists and bandits.

    The group’s chairman, Lamina Kamiludeen, made the request in Osogbo, Odun State. He also questioned when random abductions would end. He requested to know whether the Islamic scholar was above the law. Kamiludeen insisted that the government must urgently address the concerns of the people.

    Sheikh Gumi has gained notoriety in the past few years over his interventions at certain times that terrorists and bandits have struck in different parts of the North West where they have been abducting children and adults, and demanding various sums as ransom.

    Curiously too, Gumi’s media consultant, Tukur Mamu, was in September 2022 arrested in Cairo, Egypt, while on his way to Saudi Arabia for lesser hajj, on allegations of his involvement with terrorism financing. His case is still in court.

    Sheikh Gumi’s interventionist proposals are often shrouded in controversies as many believe that even though negotiators abound across the world under certain circumstances and situations, his own comes off  very

    blurry. He recently declared  that the Federal Government has no right to declare anyone a terrorism financier after the government, through the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NIFU) released a list of more than a dozen names of  people found to have been allegedly financing terrorism in Nigeria, top on the list being his close ally, Mamu, who is alleged to have received about $200,000 in support of ISWAP terrorists for the release of the Abuja-Kaduna train victims in March 2022.

    Many analysts are confused  with the rhetoric of  Gumi who on several kidnap cases had stepped forward and offered to be a negotiator between victims’ families, governments and the terrorists. While many believe negotiations can be functional, the utterances of Gumi often contradict his posturing as a peacemaker.

    In October 2023, he was quoted as declaring that Nigerian Christians and southerners cannot be trusted with power like northern Muslims. He had alleged that they have taken over all the ‘juicy and lucrative’ positions in the country. His constant reference to historical power play and coups and counter-coups are nothing short of sheer emotional manipulation that cannot foster peace. Peace- making is a global concept and negotiators try to be neutral and objective. His many rhetoric seems very far from the realities on ground.

    Read Also: FEC approves fund to bridge $878bn national infrastructure deficit

    Sheikh Gumi can do better than use his position as a cleric to fan embers of division in a country already so polarised along religious and tribal lines, with huge collateral damages. It is contradictory to claim to negotiate with terrorists and bandits and then continue the flawed narrative that northerners are better leaders, citing former President Muhammadu Buhari’s alleged nepotism as “not evil (wicked) because it did no harm to anyone, if it cannot promote your interest, it cannot harm it either…”.

    There is no worse contradiction than the diverse narratives of a Sheikh Gumi who has a good platform to not only intervene for the release of terrorism victims but to foster peaceful co-existence of a country so divided along tribal and religious lines. Pitting the Northern/Muslim region against the Southern/Christian does not highlight him as a neutral arbiter. He must not be seen to be speaking from both sides of the mouth as it escalates tension and can be inciting. As one who deals with the minds of adults and children, he must be wary of playing up sentiments that can be combustive.

    The government on its part must exercise its powers to keep citizens to obey the laws of the land. Turning a blind eye to Gumi’s narratives can be counter-productive. He is seen as a role model by many and leaving him to continue to use his platform without checks and balances does not elevate peace in the country.

    Nigeria is a secular country and must protect all the citizens to avoid a proliferation of religious/tribal supremacy battles. Gumi must be made to operate in ways to foster overall national peace

  • Gumi not involved in rescue of abducted Kaduna pupils — Gov Sani

    Gumi not involved in rescue of abducted Kaduna pupils — Gov Sani

    Kaduna Governor Uba Sani said popular Kaduna-based Muslim cleric, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, was not involved in the safe return of abducted Kuriga pupils.

    The schoolchildren were rescued on Sunday by the military in collaboration with local authorities from neighbouring Zamfara State where the hostages were moved to by their kidnappers.

    The Governor, who stated this on Channels Television’s Sunday Politics programme, said the cleric had offered to negotiate with bandits for the release of the pupils.

    Read Also: Gumi: security agencies have no right to declare anyone terror financier

    Sani described as speculations, talks in some quarters that ransom was paid, stressing that Gumi was not involved in the rescue of the pupils.

    According to him: “All those speculations you are hearing today are figments of some people’s imagination.

    “I can tell you that without any fear of contradiction. There was nothing like Gumi in this operation. I can tell you. I won’t undermine the efforts of our Armed Forces.”

  • Gumi: security agencies have no right to declare anyone terror financier

    Gumi: security agencies have no right to declare anyone terror financier

    Popular Kaduna based Islamic cleric Sheikh Ahmad Gumi has argued security agencies have no right to declare any Nigerian a terror financier. 

    He made the statement following declaration of one of his associates Tukur Mamu and 14 others as terror financiers by the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU).

    According to the NFIU, Mamu “participated in the financing of terrorism by receiving and delivering ransome payments over the sum of $200,000 US in support of ISWAP terrorists for the release of hostages of the Abuja-Kaduna train attack.”

    Gumi, who warned against media trial of his associate, also said if Mamu is found guilty by the court, he should face the music.

    Reacting to the recent list, Gumi said:  “Mamu’s case is in the court. Let’s wait to hear from the court. It’s wrong to resort to media trial. Let’s wait for the court to state of he is a financier or not. I think if he is acquitted, he has a strong case to make on libel.”

    Read Also: Ahmad Gumi: Cleric of blood, face of hate

    He added: “Who declares someone a terrorist financer? Is it the court of law or a security agency? Security agency has no right to declare anyone a terrorist financer. The case is already in court, so why are they judging him on the pages of the newspaper? Once a case is in court, you allow the court to decide.

    “I am a public figure; many people come to me. The good, the bad, the ugly. As a preacher, I cannot send anybody away, no matter how bad. If you ask, especially pastors, armed robbers come to them and confess but they cannot still take them to the authorities.

    “What I know of Mamu and his arrest is a misunderstanding between him and the committee that was supposed to deal with the release of some victims. But since the case is in court, we hope the court will be just to him. 

    “That is what we wanted all along; take him to court. Instead of incarcerating someone and leveling phantom allegations against him. Bring your proofs, And if Mamu is found guilty, he should have full fledged punishment. But as of what I know, let’s wait for the court.”

  • Gumi and his chorus line

    There’s a certain tendency among the Nigerian elite whose only formula for relevance is hammering on our ethnic and religious fault lines. For them no disaster or tragedy is too grievous to be exploited for diabolical ends.

    No surprise therefore that the killing by the army in Tudun Biri, Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State, of over 120 innocent citizens in a drone attack, has seen them crawling out of the woodwork in their numbers.

    This latest incident has triggered widespread anger and soul-searching given that it’s not the first. Ali Ndume, senator representing Borno South Senatorial District at the National Assembly, says they have happened 16 times with a death toll of 485.

    In any time or clime people would demand answers for such a calamity. The Nigeria Army insists the bombing was not intentional. While many are inclined to believe them given that there’s no logical reason why villagers in some remote part of Kaduna State would be deliberately targeted for elimination, there’s a sense of frustration that the military haven’t learnt any lessons from past incidents.

    This could be down to the fact that consequences were non-existent. Who was held to account? What was the punishment? The establishment just went its merry way, probably arguing that these things happen.

    In some countries heads would roll because of the monumental embarrassment and shock this has caused to the system. We may yet see people pay a price for incompetence or errors of judgement given that President Bola Tinubu has vowed to punish those found culpable.

    While reasonable demands for answers keep pouring in, we are also seeing an orchestrated effort by the usual suspects to fill the void with insane and dangerous conspiracy theories that can destabilise the country unless there’s pushback. 

    For instance, controversial cleric Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, has categorically stated that the bombing wasn’t an error. Delivering his weekly sermon at the Sultan Bello Mosque, Kaduna, he argued that if the first bomb dropped on the people was a mistake, the second that targeted those evacuating the bodies 30 minutes later – as claimed by the villagers – couldn’t be described as such.

    He said: “I kept telling you not to invite people who see war as a solution but people refused to listen. Here it’s now. War is never a joke because it affects everybody. I warned you on this but you keep saying they should be killed.

    “It’s you that will be killed. That bomb was meant to target the families of some people so as to kill their children and wives.”

    His suggestion is that victims were targeted because of who they were – ordinary Muslims out on a religious procession. The allegation that the bombing had sinister religious or ethnic undertones is a weighty one to make – especially when not backed up by any evidence other than one’s extreme assumptions.

    Trotting out the same sectarian drivel, was former Executive Secretary of the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), Prof. Usman Yusuf, who found a way to link the tragedy to the outcome of the 2023 presidential election, military postings and even fallout from the coup in Niger Republic.

    In an interview on Arise TV, he argued that the President and Vice President were both Muslims, yet Muslims in the North were still being killed.

    He stated: “Our people in the North are saying you are killing Muslims, inflicting a lot more pain on Muslims. You closed the borders along all the seven Northern states because you want to go to war with Niger. You are inflicting pain. Look at the military hierarchy, people are being mischievous. Look at the operational military hierarchy and look at their religion. The military needs to be very careful and start doing damage control fast.’’

    The professor’s outburst suggests that in the last eight years when Muhammadu Buhari – a Muslim was president – Muslims were not killed in conflict situations across the North, or that borders in different parts of the country were not shut. In fact, the point was made that while they were firmly closed down South, up North they were only so in name.

    Another contributor to the debate, a Sokoto-based Islamic teacher, Sheikh Muhammad Yabo, bemoaned the fact that error bombings happened only in the North, without a single one occurring down South. Wow! I know of quota and federal character requirements in our statutes, but I wasn’t aware they also applied to human tragedies.

    Read Also: Kaduna bombing: Tinubu’s daughter visits victims, donates N5m to injured survivors

    One of the more interesting interventions was from a former Special Assistant on Digital Communications to Buhari, Bashir Ahmad. He posted this on his X handle: “Haba! You can’t kill 126 innocent souls – a hundred and twenty-six civilians, and just call it a mistake. I can’t even remember a time when the troops killed such a number of terrorists anywhere in this country at once.”

    The internet never forgets they say. So people swiftly reminded him of his tweet dated January 18, 2017 in which he announced: “A presidential delegation led by COS, Abba Kyari, will today visit Rann, Borno, where NAF accidently bombed a civilian community yesterday.”

    That error air strike in a town hosting thousands of internally displaced persons (IDPs) left 126 dead – among them aid workers and refugees. One estimate by Médecins Sans Frontières put the toll at 170, others say as many as 236 died.

    Aside foreign groups like Human Rights Watch and the like, not many remember vociferous cries of condemnation from those who are now vocally condemning “the killing of Northerners.”

    One of the biggest tragedies to have befallen Nigeria is the mismanagement of the Boko Haram sect in its infancy, and the subsequent killing of its founder, Mohammed Yusuf, in murky circumstances. Those actions laid the foundation for the transformation of a local irritant into an insurgency that has ravaged the Northeast and destroyed its economy in the last decade. The bungling was pulled off by an administration headed by a Northerner, Umaru Yar’Adua.

    The violence by Boko Haram and the Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP) is estimated to have killed more than 35,000 people between 2009 and 2020. But in a 2021 report, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), put the total number of those killed at nearly 350,000 – ten times higher.

    All of these losses were incurred in the North. Some of those fatalities occurred when suicide bombers deliberately targeted mosques. Not much was heard from Gumi and his fellow regional and religious champions about the atrocities. It’s almost like they are saying: ‘it is okay when we are in charge and killing ourselves, but not so when someone else is calling the shots.’

    That tells me their bitter, hypocritical venting is driven more by petty grievances over loss of privilege and advantage than genuine compassion for the victims of Tudun Biri.

    While we are asking how much longer the military can continue making these avoidable errors, we should also be querying how long the country can continue to humour ethnic and religious extremists whose only agenda is to further divide us.

    When Gumi is not attacking President Tinubu for appointing Nyesom Wike – a Southerner and Christian – Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister (as if the position was exclusively reserved for his region), he’s making the case for coddling of bandits in the Northwest who think nothing of slaughtering scores of hapless villagers, or setting their dwellings ablaze for failing to pay protection levies.

    His extreme and inflammatory rhetoric has gone on for long enough. It’s time more people said to him: enough is enough.

    Thankfully, the greater percentage of the elite don’t subscribe to his ideas. Some of them have taken practical steps to show compassion to the victims. Senators have donated their December salaries. The Northern Caucus of the House of Representatives, many individuals and groups have committed to giving millions to the devastated community. What has Gumi and his chorus line done for the people he claims to love so much beyond mischievous fault-finding?

  • No law forbids non-muslims becoming FCT minister, Rivers elders tell Gumi

    No law forbids non-muslims becoming FCT minister, Rivers elders tell Gumi

    Concerned elites in Rivers State have condemned claims by a popular Islamic cleric, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi that it was wrong for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to appoint a Christian as Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Gumi had called on Tinubu to remove Barrister Nyesom Wike as FCT minister if he wanted to be on the same page with him.

    Convener of the elites, Chief Tony Okocha who faulted the statement on Friday while briefing reporters regretted that the outbursts of Gumi as spread by his supporters were an affront to one nationhood and described the development as treasonable under the law governing the land.

    Rejecting claims that the FCT is in the Northern region and so, the only ones who qualify to occupy the ministerial position of the FCT must be a Northerner, Okocha argued that Abuja is not a designated core northern state to be inhabited and governed only by the northerners and that the territory is not dominated by only Muslims.

    Okocha who alleged that the cleric incited the north not to be comfortable with the appointment of a non-Muslim to head security agencies in Nigeria, as none, order than a Northern/Muslim can be fair to all and sundry, accused the cleric of intending to expand the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or amending it from its prescribed Secular State status, to a mono-religious State.

    Noting that the President is at liberty to appoint any Nigerian to any office without consideration for tribe or religion, the convener said the current Minister of FCT, Nyesom Wike is fit and proper to be appointed as Minister of the territory.

    Okocha said he has not been found guilty of any infraction whatsoever, but rather has worked in tandem with the mission assigned to him within the ambit of the constitution of Nigeria and remains unshakable.

    According to him, any call for his sack is maliciously orchestrated and so, cannot hold water.

    Okocha said: “The Muslim cleric took to the pulpit in Hausa language to say the FCT is in the Northern Region and so, the only ones who qualify to occupy the Ministerial Position of the FCT must be a Northerner.

    Read Also: Lagos APC congratulates Tinubu, Nigerians

    “How does being a Christian make one an infidel or how could Sheikh Gumi refer to the occupant of the FCT Ministerial office, one tested and proven as an infidel?

    “Is Abuja designated a core northern state to be inhabited and Governed only by the northerners?

    Are all northern Indigenes Muslims?

    “Is Gumi intending to expand the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or amending it from its prescribed Secular State status, to a mono-religious State “suo moto”’ and in this case, Nigeria being an Islamic State?”

    “Having lost in his hitherto lucrative business of negotiations of ransom between the abductors and abductees, Gumi feels badly bruised and therefore, anything goes.

    “Sheikh Gumi having publicly campaigned against the voting of anyone who, according to him, is against bandits, is deficient in moral rectitude and “ipso facto” lacks moral imperative to speak.”

    On an alleged plan to demolish the national mosque, Okocha stated: “The Purveyors of this villainous venom have the latent and patent intentions to show off the Hon. Minister as one against the Muslim faith and hater of the North.

    “Not even the swift rebuttal of the orchestrated lies and blatant falsehood by the Executive Secretary of the FCTA and even the unequivocal denial of the Hon. Minister made meaning to the mischief-makers and naysayers.

    “For the records, it goes without saying that the Minister of the FCT, is not known as a coward, rather, he is a man that exudes unfettered and deft courage and boldness.”

  • No law in Nigeria forbids non-Muslim from becoming FCT minister – Rivers elite tell Gumi

    No law in Nigeria forbids non-Muslim from becoming FCT minister – Rivers elite tell Gumi

    Concerned elites in Rivers State have condemned claims by a popular Islamic cleric, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi that it was wrong for President Bola Tinubu to appoint a Christian as Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Gumi had called on Tinubu to remove Nyesom Wike as FCT minister if he wanted to be on the same page with him.

    Convener of the elites, Tony Okocha, who faulted the statement on Friday while briefing reporters regretted that the outbursts of Gumi as spread by his supporters were an affront to one Nation-hood and described the development as Treasonable under the law governing the land.

    Rejecting claims that the FCT is in the Northern Region and so, the only ones who qualify to occupy the Ministerial Position of the FCT must be a Northerner, Okocha argued that Abuja is not a designated core northern state to be inhabited and governed only by the northerners and that the territory is not dominated by only Muslims.

    Okocha who alleged that the cleric incited the north not to be comfortable with the appointment of a non-Muslim to head Security Agencies in Nigeria, as none, order than a Northern/Muslim can be fair to all and sundry, accused the cleric of intending to expand the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or amending it from its prescribed Secular State status, to a mono-religious State.

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    Noting that the President is at liberty to appoint any Nigerian to any office without consideration for tribe or religion, the convener said the current Minister of FCT, Nyesom Wike is fit and proper to be appointed as Minister of the territory.

    Okocha said he has not been found guilty of any infraction whatsoever, but rather has worked in tandem with the mission assigned to him within the ambit of the constitution of Nigeria and remains unshakable.

    According to him, any call for his sack is maliciously orchestrated and so, cannot hold water.

    Okocha said: “The Muslim cleric took to the pulpit in the Hausa language to say the FCT is in the Northern Region and so, the only ones who qualify to occupy the Ministerial Position of the FCT must be a Northerner.

    “He further incites the north not to be comfortable with the appointment of a non-Muslim to head Security Agencies in Nigeria, as none, other than a Northern/Muslim can be fair to all and sundry.

    “These incisive attacks of Gumi as spread by his adherents, affront our One Nation-hood and so, we conclude that it is TREASONABLE.

    “How does being a Christian make one an infidel or how could Sheikh Gumi refer to the occupant of the FCT Ministerial office, one tested and proven as an infidel?

    “Is Abuja designated a core northern state to be inhabited and governed only by the northerners?

    Are all northern Indigenes Muslims?

    “Is Gumi intending to expand the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or amending it from its prescribed Secular State status, to a mono-religious State “suo moto”’ and in this case, Nigeria being an Islamic State?

    “What constitutes’ the hub in the characteristic features of a Federation, is the belief in “Unity in Diversity”.

    “Is Gumi unaware that Musa Yar’Adua of sweet memory, father of former Nigerian President Yar’dua also of sweeter memory, was in the first Republic, 1963 to 1966 before the Military stroke, the Minister for Lagos Affairs?

    “Sheikh Gumi, being an ardent northern chauvinist/jingoist and die-heart supporter Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, PDP President Candidate, 2023 Election, holds President Tinubu’s administration in utter derision and can only pander to tissues of lies and unconstructive criticisms “ex nihilo.

    “The same could be concluded as the reason for his morbid hatred for The Hon. Minister of FCT, HE Chief E.N Wike.

    “Having lost in his hitherto lucrative business of negotiations of ransom between the abductors and abductees, Gumi feels badly bruised and therefore, anything goes.

    “Sheikh Gumi having publicly campaigned against the voting of anyone who, according to him, is against bandits, is deficient in moral rectitude and “ipso facto” lacks moral imperative to speak.”

    On an alleged plan to demolish the national mosque, Okocha stated: “The Purveyors of this villainous venom have the latent and patent intentions to show off the Hon. Minister as one against the Muslim faith and hater of the North.

    “Not even the swift rebuttal of the orchestrated lies and blatant falsehood by the Executive Secretary of the FCTA and even the unequivocal denial of the Hon. Minister made meaning to the mischief-makers and naysayers.

    “For the records, it goes without saying that the Minister of the FCT, is not known as Coward. Rather, he is a man that exudes unfettered and deft Courage and Boldness.”

  • Leadership about merit, not religion; Northern CAN youths tell Gumi

    Leadership about merit, not religion; Northern CAN youths tell Gumi

    The Youth Wing of Christian Association of Nigeria (YOWICAN) in the 19 northern States has canvassed acceptance of leaders with competence irrespective of their religion. 

    It was reacting  to reports of an Islamic cleric, Sheikh Ahmed Gumi suggesting that the FCT Minister ought to be a Muslim. 

    The body aid the Minister, Nyesom Wike, has proven competence, which is what should matter.

    The YOWICAN Chairman for the 19 northern States, Evangelist Musa Misal, said in a statement in Yola, that it is also dangerous for Gumi to have advised President Bola Tinubu not to leave national security in the hands of Christians or southerners.

    “This is uncalled for in a secular and democratic state like Nigeria. They are getting it all wrong,” YOWICAN stated, adding that Gumi’s recent sermons would only stir unnecessary hatred and pitch Nigerians against one another,” it stressed. 

    Read Also: Northern CAN youths blasts Gumi, says leadership is about merit, not religion

    The group also took exception to Gumi’s position on Nigeria’s relations with Israel, stating, “Sheikh Gumi and some other clerics have clearly displayed their bigotry. Attacking the diplomatic relationship Nigeria has with the State of Israel is a waste of time. The same clerics see nothing wrong with the Nigeria-Saudi Arabia relationship.”

    Insisting that Gumi’s “provocating comments during a sermon on 14th October in Kaduna” was unfortunate, YOWICAN sought a check on Gumi and others like him, stating, “It is particularly worrisome the obvious inaction of the nation’s security agencies and the slow attitude of government to prosecute such people over their actions that are capable of causing serious religious crises in Nigeria.

    “We expect the leadership of this country to show them that no one is above the law and to curb hate speeches, inflammatory sermons or political statements.”