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8 Months After, Nigerians Still Await Buhari's Change - Influential Catholic Bishop, Kukah Speaks Out

Posted by Odinaka on Mon 22nd Feb, 2016 - tori.ng

Popular Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Mathew Hassan Kukah, has evaluated the eight months administration of President Muhammadu Buhari and concluded that Nigerians were yet to see his promised change in the country.

Bishop Mathew Hassan Kuka
 
While deliver­ing a valedictory lecture in honour of the out-going Vice-Chancellor of Michael Okpara University of Agri­culture, Umudike, Professor Hilary Edeoga, influential Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Mathew Hassan Kukah, ap­praised the eight months administration of President Muhammadu Buhari and concluded that Nigerians were yet to see his promised change in the country.
 
The outspoken priest who spoke out on Sunday in Umuahia, Abia State, advised the President to inspire Nige­rians into engaging in eco­nomic activities that would help revive the economy of the country that is at the verge of collapse. He challenged Buhari to learn from great world leaders who saw op­portunities in the challenges of their countries.
 
He said great leaders ex­celled because they were able to transform challenges into opportunities, saying: "This is one of the finest moments for us to trans­form our nation."
 
Speaking further, he said: "One of our problems in Nigeria is that we lack the imagination, the charisma and the capacity to rouse a crowd. From 1960 till date, have you seen any Nigerian President’s speech you feel like going back to read?."
 
Bishop Kuka and President Buhari in Aso Rock
 
The cleric said people abused him when he pre­dicted that Buhari might not perform magic, say­ing that the inability of the President to fix Nigeria’s wobbling economy eight months after assumption of office has justified his pre­dictions.
 
"When I said what I said, people were abusing me. I didn’t have any need to de­fend myself in the sense that I know this country a little bit well enough. Suddenly, in less than three months, the same people who were accusing me called me and said, ‘Bishop what did you see at that time that we didn’t see’?

"Now all those who were pretending that they were so fanatical about Buhari, I am the one now telling them to hold on and be patient that the man will gradually get there."
 
He faulted Buhari’s ap­proach on the war against corruption without corre­sponding efforts to grow the economy, saying the Presi­dent is on his own.
 
"All these talk about fighting corruption, Nigeri­ans are now convinced that Buhari is on his own. But the truth of the matter still remains that all of us believe that we cannot continue this way. The question is who is going to pay what price?"
 
Bishop having a chat with Buhari at presidential villa, Abuja
 
He, however, said, "It is not only the responsibil­ity of government to fix the economic maladies of the nation but the collective duty of the intellectual class. The redemption of this country does not lie in the hands of politicians."
 
He also criticised Buhari’s administration over its claims that it had defeated Boko Haram when it was evident that the war against insurgency is yet to be over.

"I hear government say, Technically, we have de­feated Boko Haram; we have also degraded them. The vocabulary is changing but one fact is that beyond the shifting of the goal post, there is a moral issue.

"Government is focus­ing on reconstruction as if one day, they will open the window and find that Boko Haram is gone. They are thinking of reconstruction in economic terms, but it is all about understanding the dynamics of the societ­ies that have gone through what Nigeria is going through.

"The end of Boko Haram is the beginning of another war by another means. It may not be a shooting-war."


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