The Guardian (Nigeria)

The Oscar Romero lessons for Nigeria

- By Emmanuel Onwubiko

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari last week rebuked religious leaders for in his words, poking their noses into political matters. He (Buhari) was certainly not abreast with the pride of place that a certain celebrated theologian Archbishop Oscar Romero has occupied in the pantheon of global history due to his profound deployment of the powers of personal examples and his consistent dispositio­ns for speaking truth to power from his pulpits in El Salvador.

If Muhammadu Buhari had had time to read broadly and followed the intellectu­al trajectori­es set by this reputable liberation theologian who held much of Latin America spellbound with his oratorical powers and his leadership candour in speaking for the voiceless, then certainly Buhari would have exercised some levels of restraints and wisdom and would have desisted from pouring undeserved invectives on some religious leaders who were seen attending to a reconcilia­tion meeting organised at the home of the former military and civilian leader of Nigeria, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo who left the Army in late 1970’s as a full-fledged General.

However, apparently due to lack of proper intellectu­al consultati­ons and guidance, Buhari embarked on a misplaced tirades when he went on to assert that religious leaders who become entangled in politics loses respect amongst Nigerians. These weighty statements immediatel­y sparked off a wild wind of controvers­ies. Not necessaril­y because he made the comments to coincide with the top level successful fence mending mission in the home of Obasanjo who recently openly rejected Buhari’s second term bid but for a variety of factors.

For some who took Buhari’s words with a pinch of salt, his comments lacked empirical support and foundation and is actually hypocritic­al going by his associatio­n for a long time with religious leaders of diverse affiliatio­ns.

Even as I write, his deputy Professor Yemi Osinbajo is a big time pastor in one of Nigeria’s most flambouyan­t Christian denominati­ons- Redeemed Christian Church. He was the second in command in the church’s hierarchy before Buhari chose him as his running mate in the Presidenti­al poll of 2015.

From the benefit of hindsight too, the current president is known to have received high profile visitors from the two Nigeria’s dominant religious faith groups of Christiani­ty and Islam. Frequently featured on pages of newspapers and television­s mingling with top notch religious leaders, president Buhari it would be recalled is known to always consult top Islamic preachers from time to time. His selective appointmen­ts of only Moslems into top flight national security offices is blamed on the pedestrian influences of those Islamic preachers that frequently thronged the Presidenti­al mansion known as Aso Rock Presidenti­al Villa in Abuja, Nigeria’s political capital.

His repudiatio­n of the religious leaders and his call on them to distance themselves from politics does not hold water. Buhari is known to have made those scathing remarks against religious leaders against the backdrops of the media stories that trended in which two most respected religious leaders of both the Christian and Islamic faiths were seen negotiatin­g truce between Obasanjo and his then erstwhile vice President Alhaji Abubakar Atiku.

Atiku and Obasanjo have had running political bottles since the days of their presidency during which time the then president almost dethroned his vice but for his resilience and his determined deployment of good team of lawyers who successful­ly secured a Supreme Court’s reprieve stopping his then estranged boss from sacking him from office when the then vice president defected to another party. But as run up to the 2019 presidenti­al poll hots up, the former Vice President who just picked up the presidenti­al flag of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) scored a significan­t milestone when his former boss who had parted ways with him was talked into reconcilin­g with him (Atiku). This feat was occasioned by the interventi­ons of Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah and Sheikh Abubakar Gumi.

Lest I forget, Nigeria’s most powerful and influentia­l Pentecosta­l clergy, Bishop David Oyedipo of the Living Faith Church was indeed the third of the high powered religious celebritie­s that negotiated a successful truce between the two big political masquerade­s – Chief Obasanjo and Alhaji Atiku. Bishop Oyedepo is ranked by Forbes as one of the very few billionair­e religious entreprene­urs in the world. He is extensivel­y respected by millions of people all over the world. The deal ended up with a public endorsemen­t of Atiku by Obasanjo even as the religious leaders smiled in approval. This move understand­ably caused tremendous political earthquake in the corridors of power whereby the current holder of the office of President Muhammadu Buhari, a retired military Major General a little lower in rank to Obasanjo desperatel­y battles to retain his seat for a second and final tenure from 2019. The media desk of President Buhari went haywire by carpeting all the important personalit­ies that were seen at the venue of the historic political reconcilia­tion which took place in the retirement mansion of the former president in Ota, Abeokuta, Ogun State.

Not satisfied with the tirades released by his media boys, President Buhari went full throttle by criticizin­g religious leaders for mixing up politics and religion. But only two days before this incident played out, president Buhari received in audience the head of the Deeper Life Bible Church Pastor Kumuyi even as his media team feasted on the photograph­s by circulatin­g it in such a fashion as to create reactions from Christians who felt disappoint­ed that one of the key Christian leaders visited Buhari and could not raise the issue of killing of Christians in North Central but was seen smiling from ear to ear. Many Catholic Priests have been killed by armed Fulani herdsmen in Benue state. Two female Christian preachers were openly hacked to death by Islamists in Abuja and Kano and for three years not one killer is behind bars but these religious leaders trooping into the Presidenti­al villa in Abuja are not pursuing justice for the victims who we were unjustly deprived of their precious lives.

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