14th May, 2018
PRESS RELEASE:
IGNORE ADEBOYE’S FORECAST ON 2019
The General Overseer of the Redeemed
Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye last week warned that
Nigeria as it is presently constituted may cease to exist if killings continue.
He also added that 2019 elections may not hold.
The
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) rejects this message of doom. Nations are not run
on prophesies and divisive messages but on industry, love, fortitude, unity,
honesty and determination.
We recall that killings and cattle
rustling did not begin yesterday. These attacks have been there since the early
60s. It was not Nigerians who were attacking themselves but cattle thieves and
criminals from neighbouring countries like Niger, Chad and Mali. These
invasions from other countries have continued till today due to Nigeria’s
porous borders. But Nigerians exploit religious rivalry and acrobatic
religiousity instead of engaging in diligent investigations. We are blaming
ourselves for nothing.
Still going along the lanes of
history, a few years back Nigerian Christian leaders initially accused Muslims
in the country of sponsoring Boko Haram to kill Christians. All denials fell on
deaf ears. Foul language was used. Provocative statements were issued. Nigerian
Muslim leaders exhibited patience throughout those terrible days. Today the
picture has become clearer to the Christian leaders as Boko Haram has killed
more Muslims than Christians (including an Emir) and destroyed more mosques
than churches.
The
truth is that both Christians and Muslims are victims of killings, though
Christians may have the advantage of media support to use killings on its side
as a propaganda tool. The Nigerian media hardly hypes reports of Muslim deaths,
nor do they report them correctly with their religious affiliation. Meanwhile Muslims
do not use their dead victims for propaganda because, as a rule, Muslims bury
their dead speedily whereas Christians delay the burial of their dead and
openly display them. But the fact is that the monkey is also sweating but the
hair on its skin may not allow people to see it.
Nigeria has become a land where
Shakespearean lines must be actualized: “When beggars die, there are no comets
seen. The heavens themselves blow forth the death of princes.”
Thus
when Muslims are killed, the Nigerian media uses captions like “85 killed in
Maiduguri Explosion” or “76 Die as Hoodlums Invade Zamfara Village”. But when Christians
are killed, the language and style change. The caption is “Fulani Herdsmen Murder
22 Christians”. It is for this reason that Pastor Adeboye needs to direct his
warnings at the Nigerian press, not at the government. Government is not
escalating the crisis, but the press is. Their assymetrical reportage poses
great danger to peaceful coexistence in a multi-religious Nigeria.
Pastor Adeboye should also note that
things are not usually what they look like from a distance. Benue militias have
been caught disguised as Fulani herdsmen. None of the hoodlums caught by the
military in the ongoing operation in Benue could speak Fulani language, yet
they dressed like Fulani herdsmen and carried AK47 rifles.
Fake
military camps have also been exposed in the same Middle Belt. Militiamen
arrested have confessed that the Christian state governors are their sponsors.
So why does Adeboye refuse to acknowledge the killing of Muslims? Who are the
Benue and Taraba militiamen killing?
We appeal to Pastor Adeboye to refrain
from making inflammatory statements. The Redeemed Church Overseer should also
persuade his junior priests to water down their firebrand proselytisation. There
is a world of difference between prayers, threats and illwill. Let us
concentrate on prayers when we organize assemblies ostensibly for prayers. Let
us not use such occasions to incite followers in any manner. That is criminal
digression. Preachers should not just be playing to the gallery.
As religious leaders, our influence
on our followers is immense and they take our admonitions as commandments, we
must therefore lead responsibly. Let Christian and Muslim leaders preach love,
tolerance, forgiveness and, most especially, unity. We all stand to lose if there
is war or if Nigeria breaks.
Statements
accusing government of lukewarm attitude to the ‘killing of Christians’ mislead
the outside world. It paints the wrong picture and robs the Nigerian
authorities of friends and allies who are willing to supply sophisticated
weapons needed to stop the killings. In essence, we are cutting our noses to
spite our faces. We are simply helping Boko Haram to sustain its propaganda.
Let
us therefore stop making sectarian, parochial and myopic public speeches. Let
us support government’s efforts at stopping the killings. Let us appeal to
foreign governments to assist our own government at home in combating
terrorists and insurgents.
On a last note, we contend that the
current noise about the killing of Christians is diversionary, hypocritical and
counterproductive. Both Muslims and Christians are being killed and the
solution lies in uniting men and women of all faiths to face the reality on
ground. We must all resolve to expose our killers. We must support our
government and pray for our gallant securitymen who are battling the killers
day and night. We must also appeal in unison to foreign powers to come to our
government’s aid in the war against insurgency. The Federal Government should
also strengthen the borders, particularly in the North West and North East and
recruit more soldiers and policemen.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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