Yar’Adua’s
govt visionless – CAN President
From LAMBERT TYEM, Abuja
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
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Yar’Adua
Photo: Sun News Publishing |
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As Nigerians settle down into the New Year, President of
Christian Association of Nigeria [CAN], Rev. John Onaiyekan
has launched a scathing criticism on the government of President
Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, describing it as visionless.
Speaking exclusively with Daily Sun in Abuja,
the CAN president, who is also the Catholic Archbishop of
Abuja Diocese said with regret “that it is difficult
to know the particular direction, which the present administration
is heading to.
“It is not the issue whether one is slow or fast, but
the issue is which direction are you facing and where are
you going to?
“You can be fast and running the wrong direction, and
so the important thing is are we facing the right direction
and are we really taking the right steps? Even if it is slow.
“ We rather prefer a slow movement in the right direction
than a headlong movement to disaster. It is difficult to say
– in the area of the rule of law, we can see from the
situation, how often and how much that is being respected.
We can see now that it is difficult to take things on their
face value, and by their fruits you shall know them,”
the clergy stated.
Bishop Onaiyekan berated the Yar’Adua government for
not being open to all and sundry, noting that expectations
was that the government should by now be ruling beyond party
lines.
The CAN president said that it was undemocratic for Yar’Adua’s
political party, the Peoples Democratic Party [PDP] to continue
to insult the nation that it would rule for 60 years in the
face of the mirage of problems that had been left unattended
to.
He advised the opposition parties to remain and give the people
choice to make in the next election, while decrying the action
of politicians who changed political parties because they
lost elections.
On the Jos crisis, the Archbishop said the issue of strangers,
settlers’ syndrome as raised by some people in the state
as the cause of the mayhem was not peculiar to Plateau State
but a worldwide problem, stressing that only an amendment
to the nations’ constitution could solve the problem.
According to him, “ I don’t believe that the recent
Jos crisis was really a religion-induced crisis, and by the
way, it is politicians who always make any crisis look like
a religious one so as to achieve their objectives. But it
is clear to us that we are talking to issue of interest, socially
and economically. Strangers \ settler’s syndrome is
not only peculiar to Jos but all over the world.
“ When we went to Jos with the Sultan of Sokoto recently,
an old Hausa\Fulani asked a pertinent question that his grandfather
came to Jos and the father was born in Jos as well as himself.
Then, how long are they going to be in Jos before stop being
strangers? I said that is a pertinent question, which should
be asked not only in Jos.
We should go and ask it too in Kano, Sokoto, Kebbi that how
long will an Igbo man live in those places before they stop
being treated as strangers or settlers? And how long must
a Yoruba man live in Onitsha before he stops being a stranger.
“ The issue of citizenship enshrined in our constitution
should be addressed squarely. But no matter what you do, there
will still be rivalry over scarce resources, which happens
everywhere,” Onayeikan stated.
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