Tag: YOWICAN

  • Court nullifies YOWICAN election

    •Reinstates outgoing president
    •Injunction technically faulty, suspicious, says CAN

    An Abuja High Court has set aside the January 27 presidential election of the Youth Wing of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN).

    The election that produced Apostle Nnyenime Andy as president has been contested by his outgoing predecessor, Engineer Daniel Kazai.

    Kazai argued his three-year tenure was not completed before the exercise, saying he had seven months left to preside over the body.

    In a suit no FCT/HC/CV/067218 between Engr Daniel Kazai and Elder Biodun Sanyaolu, CAN and Barrister Samuel Kwamkur, Justice M. Balami, in a ruling dated February 13, ordered the setting aside of the election.

    He also granted a mandatory injunction restraining the defendants from “deliberating on, receiving and accepting the unlawful election of national YOWICAN pending hearing of the substantive application(s).”

    The judge further restrained National Executive Council (NEC) of CAN “from allowing any of the elected officials or purportedly sworn national president of YOWICAN from holding out themselves as exco of national YOWICAN until the hearing and determination of the substantive applications.”

    He also directed the Inspector General of Police, Director General State Security Service (SSS), Commandant General of Nigeria of Civil and Security Defence Corps (NSCDC) and other relevant security apparatuses to enforce the ruling.

    Kazai told our correspondent on Friday that justice has been served.

    He said: “We salute the competence of the judiciary in handling the case. It is indeed worth celebrating to know that our judiciary is non-biased and is playing well its constitutional role of ensuring rule of law.

    “We call on Christians and general public to beware of impostors parading themselves as YOWICAN officials to defraud innocent Nigerians, most especially taking advantage of forthcoming general elections.”

    He added: “Machinations that elevate favouritism and cheap politics should not be allowed to operate in CAN. We ought to be guided in what we do, at least for the benefit of posterity.”

    But the National Legal Adviser of CAN, Barrister Samuel Kwamkur, faulted the technicality of the ruling.

    He said the judge couldn’t have given an injunction without hearing from the two parties involved.

    Kwamkur told our correspondent: “We are highly suspicious of the injunction but as a lawyer, we take everything that comes from the court on the face value.

    “We were in court on January 31 and the court didn’t say anything. It said the case was just assigned on 30th. The court asked us to return on February 23 only for us to get the injunction.

    On the next line of action, the legal adviser said: “We recognise the injunction but it is like a university certificate. When you present it, it will be verified.

    “An injunction is not a judgment. We are filing another motion to set aside that injunction because the judge has not listened to us. I am sure when he listens to us he will set aside what he gave before.”

    He carpeted Kazai for running a one-man show, wondering why he didn’t show up at the NEC meeting last week.

    “He is an unpopular leader with no followers at all. Otherwise why didn’t he show up at the NEC meeting since he claims to have the backing of the court?”

  • YOWICAN disputed presidential election tears CAN apart

    YOWICAN disputed presidential election tears CAN apart

    The past few weeks have been quite stormy for leaders of the Christian Association of Nigeria(CAN) following emerging developments over the disputed election of the youth wing of the body, reports Sunday Oguntola 

    Top officials of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) are at loggerheads over the leadership crisis rocking the youth wing of the body (YOWICAN).

    The leadership crisis, which started as far back as January 2015, escalated last month with the election of a new executive council without the consent and handover of the outgoing executives.

    YOWICAN’s outgoing president, Engr. Dan Kazai, faulted the election on the ground that his tenure was still running. According to him, since he was inaugurated on November 2015, his three-year tenure should end by November 2018.

    Kazai told our correspondent last week the election that produced Apostle Nyeneime Andy of the Christian Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria/Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (CPFN/PFN) bloc is an illegality that will not stand.

    He declared himself the substantive YOWICAN president, saying he couldn’t have been succeeded since he did not hand over. Kazai said: “I am still in office because I have not handed over. I still run my office and nobody has been using it but me. I still have my signatory on all the official documents.”

    The election, according to the Adamawa-born Kazai, is null and void because he applied for an injunction restraining CAN from conducting the exercise from an Abuja High Court.

    The original summons, the YOWICAN helmsman said was signed for by National Secretary of CAN, Rev Musa Asake as well as the National Director of Education, Women and Youth Development, Elder Biodun Sanyaolu.

    “They should be aware that as long as there is a case in court, all actions must be suspended until it is dispensed it. It is sad to note that CAN officials who should mirror justice and fairness can sign for a court document and still go ahead with the exercise in defiance,” Kazai stated.

    He alleged certain forces in the apex Christian body are bent on imposing people they can use for their clandestine plans ahead of the 2019 general elections.

    “They want to get me out of the way for someone they can use. They want to use CAN structure to make money from politicians next year,” he alleged.

    But Andy told our correspondents Kazai is fighting a lost battle for himself. “The truth is he is alone. He is the only one that has refused to hand over. His secretary and assistant have handed over, including others.

    “They even took us to the CAN President on Wednesday for introduction as the new YOWICAN executives. So, he is on his own and fighting for himself. Others have officially handed over to us.

    “I have my office and so do other executives. The same Kazai has a history of leaving every post he held with rancor. He did the same when he was YOWICAN chairman in Nasarawa,” Andy stated.

    A festering wound

    Checks by our correspondent revealed the troubles with YOWICAN started in 2014 when national election was called for. Barrister Samuel Kwamkur, the leading presidential candidate, was coasting home but forces within his ECWA/TEKAN bloc denied him nomination.

    On Election Day, ECWA/TEKAN delegates met and decided to nominate Kazai to represent the bloc. Kwamkur, who had the backings of many outside his bloc, realised he had failed a basic requirement to stand for election: bloc nomination.

    Kazai was massively voted but Kwamkur, a lawyer, headed to court, a development that embarrassed the CAN leadership and forced many peace meetings.

    At the end of the interventions, an out-of-court settlement was arrived at, an arrangement that leapfrogged Kwamkur to his current office as National Legal Adviser.

    Kazai was eventually sworn in on November 11, 2015, few months after the other executive members have started operations in January. It is on the basis of the inauguration date that he is contesting the length of his tenure, arguing it has been cut short by almost 11 months.

    Investigations revealed his fate was sealed at the last National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of CAN in Abuja where the National Director of Education, Women and Youth Development, Elder Biodun Sanyaolu, presented a memo that was accepted by the house.

    The memo, insiders confided, requested for a go-ahead for the exercise after the adoption of the 37-year-old limit for candidates.

    Kazai, it was learnt, avoided the meeting knowing he would have no influence whatsoever in the final decision.

    Penultimate Wednesday, Sanyaolu followed up with a private memo to CAN President, His Eminence Rev Dr Supo Ayokunle.

    The memo, obtained by our correspondent, reads: “Your Eminence Sir,

    “I humbly wish to inform you of the following as regards the coming YOWICAN election:

    “a. This afternoon, we received a notice of originating summons filed by Dan Kazai whereby he has applied for an injunction to restrain CAN from conducting the election of Saturday 27th January. The case is to be heard on Tue 31st January at the High court in Abuja. No injunction order yet pls.

    “b. We have completed the screening of the candidates. Out of the three candidates for the Chairmanship, the one nominated by CPFN/PFN has been disqualified on the ground that he’s 8months above 37years which is the age limit as approved by NEC.

    “c. Following the publication of Guardian of 24th January, page 6 wherein, Dan Kazai claimed that the leadership of CAN has been given 5bn and has adopted PMB for a 2nd term, and that he’s the only one that opposed the adoption; a reason why we want to conduct election 10months into the end of his tenure, in order to punish him. I met with Senator Phillip from Nasarawa to explain the whole story and to debunk the falsehood.

    “After due consultation with the Director Legal, we are informing you of our decision to conduct the election as approved by NEC.

    Many thanks for your support sir.”

    Brewing troubles

    Andy’s initial suspension was upturned by the screening committee, much to the annoyance of Sanyaolu, findings revealed.

    Also, NEC was alleged to have accepted the proposal by Sanyaolu that YOWICAN presidency should be based on rotation to mitigate disputes.

    The Organisation of African Instituted Church (OAIC) and Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria (CSN) were the only two blocs yet to have a shot at the youth presidency.

    But this too was ditched few hours to the election. Realising two vital components of his memo had been tampered with, a visibly angry left Abuja on the morning of the election for his base in Lagos.

    He was reported to have told people he would have nothing to do with the election, claiming some forces were out to manipulate the process.

    Without the National Director constitutionally empowered to conduct the election, the lot fell on Committee members of the Directorate to take over.

    Two out of the five-man committee, it was gathered, decided the election would go. They carried out the exercise that produced a winner with Andy scoring over 50 votes.

    Sanyaolu, it was learnt, resigned his appointment as National Director last week deeply touched by the sudden changes without his inputs in the exercise.

    A competent source told our correspondent Sanyaolu presented his letter to Ayokunle in Lagos during a parley with OAIC National leaders.

    Pleas by Ayokunle on him to consider the backlashes of such move did not yield efforts. Sanyaolu told our correspondent last Friday that he refused to conduct the election because the guideline stating contestants must be 37 years was not followed religiously.

    “I am a sticker for rules and democrat. The rule says a contestant must be 37 but the disqualified candidate was 37 years and eight months. In that circumstance, he shouldn’t have been in the race.”

    He however said he would present Andy as winner of the election to the NEC meeting this week in Abuja. “I have nothing against him. I will present him to NEC. If they say 37 is the same as being 37 and eight months, that’s fine by me.”

    Sanyaolu confirmed his resignation was upturned by the OAIC bloc that elected him for the directorate, stating that he had no choice than to follow the dictates of his bloc.

    Echoes of discord

    Aside from the resignation of Sanyaolu, checks revealed the disputed YOWICAN presidential election has further deepened the crisis of confidence in the umbrella Christian body.

    National Secretary of the body, Rev Musa Asake, told our correspondent that he wouldn’t be able to say much because he has been sidelined in the affairs of the organisation.

    “I don’t get to know much of what happens these days again in CAN. I have been here since 2012 but since the new leadership came on board, it has been more or less a one-man show.

    “Nobody told me what happened during the election officially because the Director said he wouldn’t report to me. They all report directly to the President, even when the constitution says it has to be to the National Secretary.

    “So, I am just here more or less a ceremonial secretary because I don’t know much of what happens at the secretariat again,” he stressed.

    The Vice President of CAN, Elder Professor Joseph Otubu, in a memo to some selected church leaders, also alleged imposition of candidates in the just-concluded exercise, describing it unconstitutional.

    In the memo, Otubu said: “I want to draw your attention to a just concluded youth election for the position of Chairman of YOWICAN.

    ‘The candidate of PFN for the election was disqualified on the basis of age limit but Rev Onifade (Senior Special Assistant to CAN President on Ecumenism) insisted that the candidate must be allowed to run for the election.

    “In reaction to Onifade’s insistence, Elder Sanyolu who is the Director of Youth in CAN resigned his position and did not take part in the election.

    “The duo of Ayokunle/ Onifade allowed the election to take place and the candidate from PFN emerged as winner of this unconstitutional election.

    “My concern is why a young man will spend so much money to render service as Chairman of YOWICAN? When did money become the most important thing to church leaders?

    “As it stands now Christians have been brought to believe that CAN elections are heavily monetised and whoever has a very deep pocket can emerge winner. I can longer see the difference between the behaviour of politicians and Christian leaders in CAN.

    “When we talk of CAN leaders today, Onifade literally runs CAN with the Confidential Secretary (Mrs. Eunice Araoye). How can a Confidential Secretary that was appropriated by Rev Ayokunle literally take on the position of a General Secretary?

    “So when we refer to CAN leadership as it stands today, it is Ayokunle, Onifade, the Treasurer and the confidential secretary.”

    When contacted, Senior Special Assistant on Media to Ayokunle, Rev Bayo Oladeji, denied all the allegations against the CAN President, saying they were handiworks of disgruntled elements afraid of the reforms being carried out by the number one Christian citizen.

    “He has nothing to do with the election. He was not even in the country when the exercise took place.

    “As a democrat, he allowed the Director to present his memo to NEC, which was exhaustively deliberated. He merely allowed what NEC decided to take effect.

    “He has no interest in who becomes YOWICAN President because he has more serious issues to attend to,” he stated.

  • YOWICAN disputed presidential election tears CAN apart

    YOWICAN disputed presidential election tears CAN apart

    The past few weeks have been quite stormy for leaders of the Christian Association of Nigeria(CAN) following emerging developments over the disputed election of the youth wing of the body, reports Sunday Oguntola 

    Top officials of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) are at loggerheads over the leadership crisis rocking the youth wing of the body (YOWICAN).

    The leadership crisis, which started as far back as January 2015, escalated penultimate Saturday with the election of a new executive council without the consent and handover of the outgoing executives.

    YOWICAN’s outgoing president, Engr. Dan Kazai, faulted the election on the ground that his tenure was still running. According to him, since he was inaugurated on November 2015, his three-year tenure should end by November 2018.

    Kazai told our correspondent last week the election that produced Apostle Nyeneime Andy of the Christian Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria/Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (CPFN/PFN) bloc is an illegality that will not stand.

    He declared himself the substantive YOWICAN president, saying he couldn’t have been succeeded since he did not hand over. Kazai said: “I am still in office because I have not handed over. I still run my office and nobody has been using it but me. I still have my signatory on all the official documents.”

    The election, according to the Adamawa-born Kazai, is null and void because he applied for an injunction restraining CAN from conducting the exercise from an Abuja High Court. The original summons, the YOWICAN helmsman said was signed for by National Secretary of CAN, Rev Musa Asake as well as the National Director of Education, Women and Youth Development, Elder Biodun Sanyaolu.

    “They should be aware that as long as there is a case in court, all actions must be suspended until it is dispensed it. It is sad to note that CAN officials who should mirror justice and fairness can sign for a court document and still go ahead with the exercise in defiance,” Kazai stated.

    He alleged certain forces in the apex Christian body are bent on imposing people they can use for their clandestine plans ahead of the 2019 general elections. “They want to get me out of the way for someone they can use. They want to use CAN structure to make money from politicians next year,” he alleged.

    But Andy told our correspondents Kazai is fighting a lost battle for himself. “The truth is he is alone. He is the only one that has refused to hand over. His secretary and assistant have handed over, including others.

    “They even took us to the CAN President on Wednesday for introduction as the new YOWICAN executives. So, he is on his own and fighting for himself. Others have officially handed over to us.

    “I have my office and so do other executives. The same Kazai has a history of leaving every post he held with rancor. He did the same when he was YOWICAN chairman in Nasarawa,” Andy stated.

    A festering wound

    Checks by our correspondent revealed the troubles with YOWICAN started in 2014 when national election was called for. Barrister Samuel Kwamkur, the leading presidential candidate, was coasting home but forces within his ECWA/TEKAN bloc denied him nomination.

    On Election Day, ECWA/TEKAN delegates met and decided to nominate Kazai to represent the bloc. Kwamkur, who had the backings of many outside his bloc, realised he had failed a basic requirement to stand for election: bloc nomination.

    Kazai was massively voted but Kwamkur, a lawyer, headed to court, a development that embarrassed the CAN leadership and forced many peace meetings. At the end of the interventions, an out-of-court settlement was arrived at, an arrangement that leapfrogged Kwamkur to his current office as National Legal Adviser.

    Kazai was eventually sworn in on November 11, 2015, few months after the other executive members have started operations in January. It is on the basis of the inauguration date that he is contesting the length of his tenure, arguing it has been cut short by almost 11 months.

    Investigations revealed his fate was sealed at the last National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of CAN in Abuja where the National Director of Education, Women and Youth Development, Elder Biodun Sanyaolu, presented a memo that was accepted by the house. The memo, insiders confided, requested for a go-ahead for the exercise after the adoption of the 37-year-old limit for candidates.

    Kazai, it was learnt, avoided the meeting knowing he would have no influence whatsoever in the final decision. Penultimate Wednesday, Sanyaolu followed up with a private memo to CAN President, His Eminence Rev Dr Supo Ayokunle.

    The memo, obtained by our correspondent, reads: “Your Eminence Sir,

    “I humbly wish to inform you of the following as regards the coming YOWICAN election:

    “a. This afternoon, we received a notice of originating summons filed by Dan Kazai whereby he has applied for an injunction to restrain CAN from conducting the election of Saturday 27th January. The case is to be heard on Tue 31st January at the High court in Abuja. No injunction order yet pls.

    “b. We have completed the screening of the candidates. Out of the three candidates for the Chairmanship, the one nominated by CPFN/PFN has been disqualified on the ground that he’s 8months above 37years which is the age limit as approved by NEC.

    “c. Following the publication of Guardian of 24th January, page 6 wherein, Dan Kazai claimed that the leadership of CAN has been given 5bn and has adopted PMB for a 2nd term, and that he’s the only one that opposed the adoption; a reason why we want to conduct election 10months into the end of his tenure, in order to punish him. I met with Senator Phillip from Nasarawa to explain the whole story and to debunk the falsehood.

    “After due consultation with the Director Legal, we are informing you of our decision to conduct the election as approved by NEC.

    Many thanks for your support sir.”

    Brewing troubles

    Andy’s initial suspension was upturned by the screening committee, much to the annoyance of Sanyaolu, findings revealed. Also, NEC was alleged to have accepted the proposal by Sanyaolu that YOWICAN presidency should be based on rotation to mitigate disputes.

    The Organisation of African Instituted Church (OAIC) and Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria (CSN) were the only two blocs yet to have a shot at the youth presidency. But this too was ditched few hours to the election. Realising two vital components of his memo had been tampered with, a visibly angry left Abuja on the morning of the election for his base in Lagos.

    He was reported to have told people he would have nothing to do with the election, claiming some forces were out to manipulate the process. Without the National Director constitutionally empowered to conduct the election, the lot fell on Committee members of the Directorate to take over.

    Two out of the five-man committee, it was gathered, decided the election would go. They carried out the exercise that produced a winner with Andy scoring over 50 votes. Sanyaolu, it was learnt, resigned his appointment as National Director last week deeply touched by the sudden changes without his inputs in the exercise. A competent source told our correspondent Sanyaolu presented his letter to Ayokunle in Lagos during a parley with OAIC National leaders.

    Pleas by Ayokunle on him to consider the backlashes of such move did not yield efforts. Aside from the resignation of Sanyaolu, checks revealed the disputed YOWICAN presidential election has further deepened the crisis of confidence in the umbrella Christian body.

    Echoes of discord

    National Secretary of the body, Rev Musa Asake, told our correspondent that he wouldn’t be able to say much because he has been sidelined in the affairs of the organisation. “I don’t get to know much of what happens these days again in CAN. I have been here since 2012 but since the new leadership came on board, it has been more or less a one-man show.

    “Nobody told me what happened during the election officially because the Director said he wouldn’t report to me. They all report directly to the President, even when the constitution says it has to be to the National Secretary. So, I am just here more or less a ceremonial secretary because I don’t know much of what happens at the secretariat again,” he stressed.

    The Vice President of CAN, Elder Professor Joseph Otubu, in a memo to some selected church leaders, also alleged imposition of candidates in the just-concluded exercise, describing it unconstitutional.

    In the memo, Otubu said: “I want to draw your attention to a just concluded youth election for the position of Chairman of YOWICAN. The candidate of PFN for the election was disqualified on the basis of age limit but Rev Onifade(Senior Special Assistant to CAN President on Ecumenism) insisted that the candidate must be allowed to run for the election.

    “In reaction to Onifade’s insistence, Elder Sanyolu who is the Director of Youth in CAN resigned his position and did not take part in the election. The duo of Ayokunle/ Onifade allowed the election to take place and the candidate from PFN emerged as winner of this unconstitutional election.

    “My concern is why a young man will spend so much money to render service as Chairman of YOWICAN? When did money become the most important thing to church leaders?

    “As it stands now Christians have been brought to believe that CAN elections are heavily monetised and whoever has a very deep pocket can emerge winner. I can longer see the difference between the behaviour of politicians and Christian leaders in CAN.

    “When we talk of CAN leaders today, Onifade literally runs CAN with the Confidential Secretary (Mrs. Eunice Araoye). How can a Confidential Secretary that was appropriated by Rev Ayokunle literally take on the position of a General Secretary? So when we refer to CAN leadership as it stands today, it is Ayokunle, Onifade, the Treasurer and the confidential secretary.”

    When contacted, Senior Special Assistant on Media to Ayokunle, Rev Bayo Oladeji, denied all the allegations against the CAN President, saying they were handiworks of disgruntled elements afraid of the reforms being carried out by the number one Christian citizen.

    “He has nothing to do with the election. He was not even in the country when the exercise took place. As a democrat, he allowed the Director to present his memo to NEC, which was exhaustively deliberated. He merely allowed what NEC decided to take effect. He has no interest in who becomes YOWICAN President because he has more serious issues to attend to,” he stated.

  • YOWICAN demands justice over female preacher’s killing

    The Youth Wing Christian Association of Nigeria (YOWICAN), has called on the federal government to ensure that justice is done over the murder of Deaconess Eunice Olawale penultimate Saturday in Kubwa, Abuja during early morning evangelism.

    Its national chairman Daniel Kadzai said the culprits should be brought to face the law for committing such unacceptable and barbaric act.

    “We will not allow this to continue because nobody has the monopoly of violence. As such, we hope the youths will not be pushed to start reacting negatively.

    “We will keep reminding the government through the media to make sure that justice is done on this issue.’’

    He advised Christian youths to remain calm and stay away from any form of protest as it could lead to religious violence and result to the shedding of more innocent blood.

    “We must rise up as youths to protect our properties; we must rise up and protect the church and the members therein; the church must unite.

    “As CAN, the first needful thing we sought to do was to pray with the family of the deceased and ask God to take over the irreplaceable loss.

    “We urge youths to trust God; everybody must be watchful because the days are evil.

    “We wish to appeal for calmness to all Christians, to seek proper permission for a peaceful protest against what happened and put any action on hold,’’ Kadzai said.

    Besides, the chairman called on all Christian youths and the church to stay calm and not to react to the murder until permission was obtained for a peaceful protest.

  • Jonathan advises youths on tolerance

    Jonathan advises youths on tolerance

    President Goodluck Jonathan has advised Nigerian youths to use religion to foster peace and unity in the country, even as religious youth leaders blamed the spate of societal decadence, especially violence, on the failure of religious leaders to impact teachings geared towards tolerance, peace and national unity in their followers.

    Speaking in Abuja at the first Nigerian Inter-religious Youth Summit, President Jonathan, who noted that the summit could not have come at a better time than now, said religion should be more than going to churches or mosques every day.

    Jonathan, who was represented by his Senior Special Assistant on Youth and Student Affairs, Jude Imagwe said:  “We have to be tolerant of others if we must move our society forward. When went wrong? There was a time in this country when we used to wait eagerly for exchange of gifts from our neighbours, Muslims and Christians during Sallah and Christmas. We have to start preaching peace, but to achieve peace, we must work for peace.”

    The convener of the summit, Timothy Ademola said the blame of the present rot should be directed at religious leaders, saying: “It has been argued that if religious teachers and scholars can come up with sacred identity constructs that outline more peaceful world views, the world will, to a large extent, be made much better.

    “Given the fact that youths constitute the most active segment of any religion when it comes to the implementation of its sacred identity constructs, it goes without saying that such constructs become more socially-accommodating and productive.

    “The youth that adopt the will become more socially accommodating and productive. At this level, religion actively becomes an instrument for youth empowerment and constructive change.”

    The President of Youth Wing of Christian Association of Nigeria (YOWICAN), Simon Dolly urged understanding between religious faiths.

    He said: “We need to understand each other, work together and build bridges. We should build on our strength rather than look at our weaknesses.”

    In his presentation, the National President of National Council of Muslim Youth Organisation (MACOMYO), Kamaldeen Akintunde regretted that hypocrisy on the part of religious leaders has contributed, in no small measures, to the spate of violence in the country.

    “Since religion, as a concept, means different things to different people, we should then strive to make it an agent of stability. This is more so because religious intolerance has cost the country so much in our socio-political and economic development.

    While he canvassed for constitutional regulation of religious activities, the youth leader urged political, religious and community leaders to be cautious when making comments on religious issues.

    The representative of Eckankar said the solution to violence in the country is peace.

  • Boko Haram: Youth group gives FG condition for reconciliation

    Nigerian Youth on Tuesday told the Federal Government to be more proactive on security issues just as they responded to the cases of flooding in the country.

    They said the present reconciliation moves being proposed to tame the Boko Haram sect can only succeed if certain precautions are taken into consideration.

    The Youth Wing of the Christian Association of Nigeria, YOWICAN, who made this known in Abuja through their National President, Dr. Simon Dolly, said, “We want the Federal Government to be proactive on the security crisis just the way they treated flooding issues.

    “The victims of the crisis should be compensated before reconciliation. They have to be attended to first before proposing reconciliation and absence of it will show high level of injustice. We all want peace, we need dialogue”, he said.

    Dolly, who attributed the lingering crisis in country to lack of forgiveness on the part of Christians, called on Christians to have the heart of forgiveness, tolerate one another and avoid the politics of killing.

     

  • Jonathan cautioned on amnesty for Boko Haram

    Jonathan cautioned on amnesty for Boko Haram

     

    Youth Wing of the Christian Association of Nigeria (YOWICAN) on Thursday told President Goodluck Jonathan not to grant amnesty to the Boko Haram sect.

    YOWICAN said Jonathan will find it difficult if he grants amnesty to the sect.

    The body added that the move will be potentially dangerous to Nigeria and Nigerians, and that it will be a clarion call to more terrorism in Nigeria.

    Addressing journalists in Abuja on the proposed amnesty offer, YOWICAN President, Dr. Simon Dolly, warned the Federal Government to be prepared to face more deadly and sophisticated response if the Boko Haram sects are granted amnesty.

    The Christian youths further warned Jonathan to desist from granting the amnesty and advised him to arrest the likes of Senator Zanna, Bukar Abba Ibrahim and others whose utterances and actions YOWICAN said have implicated them.

    Dolly advised Jonathan not to fuel the anger of Christian youths saying, “the fact that Christian youths have not reacted does not mean we are cowards.”

    His words: “We are worried by the clarion call and the subsequent setting up of a committee by President Goodluck Jonathan to work out modalities for granting amnesty despite his earlier position on the amorphous nature of this terrorist group. We the entire Christian Youths in Nigeria say no to any form of amnesty to members of Boko Haram sect or any such group.

    “In case Federal Government is contemplating granting amnesty to wilful murderers masquerading as political and religious insurgents who do not respect the basic tenets of humanity and the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Federal Government should be prepared to face perhaps more deadly and sophisticated response.

    “We appeal to the President not to be cowed by politicians and few misfits and naturally rebellious persons in the north who are attempting to use the Boko Haram insurgency as a bait to correct what they have failed to do while they were in power. This planned amnesty for murderers is potentially dangerous to Nigeria and Nigerians because it is a clarion call to more terrorism in the country.”