Culled from Premium Times;
The Christian Association of Nigeria has vowed to defend the founder of
Omega Fire Ministries, Johnson Suleman, after operatives of the State
Security Service tried to arrest him on Tuesday.
The group also criticised Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, saying he has failed to speak up against attacks on Christians.
Fiery Edo State-based preacher, Mr. Suleman, caused a stir by calling for the killing of Fulani herdsmen found near his church.
Speaking
on January 2 at the church’s monthly Miracle and Fire Night Service in
Auchi, Mr. Suleman said President Buhari’s “silence on the genocide in
Southern Kaduna has continued to fuel mutual recriminations and
distrust among the diverse ethnic and religious groups in the country.”
Mr. Suleiman said he had been warned that Fulani
herdsmen were planning to attack him, and urged his security guards to
kill any herdsman found around his church.
An attempt by SSS
operatives to arrest Mr. Suleman on Tuesday, reportedly for making
inciting comments, was thwarted by the Ekiti State governor, Ayodele
Fayose.
The preacher later explained that he was not targeting
any Fulani herdsmen, but only those who may seek to kill him, saying
that killing them would be in self-defence.
In its reaction to
the development on Friday, the Christian umbrella body in Nigeria, CAN,
described the planned arrest as “an attempt to turn Christians to
refugees in their own country”.
“Apostle Suleman has become a
refugee in Ekiti state as security operatives are said to be searching
every nook and cranny of the state with a view to arresting him,” CAN
said in a statement on Friday.
“If there is an urgent need to
interrogate Apostle Suleman on any issue, it would only have been proper
to extend a formal or informal invitation to him from the SSS rather
than Gestapo approach used in the attempt to arrest him. It should be
noted that under Nigerian Laws, he is presumed innocent until a court of
law proves otherwise. Or have they extended the proposed obnoxious law
that forbids religious preaching without the permission of the state
governor down south too?
“Treating Ministers of God and our
members as common criminals is unacceptable to the Christian Association
of Nigeria (CAN). Enough is enough,” the association said in its
statement signed by the special assistant on media and communication to
the CAN President, Bayo Oladeji.
The association lamented the
government’s failure to address the cases of blasphemy killings in
northern parts of the country, citing repeated cases of released
suspects, without further arrests by the security operatives.
“The
Police have been releasing those who were arrested for the killing of
our members in Kano and Kubwa (Abuja) while our leaders are being
subjected to untold hardship for no just cause.
“It is high time
the overzealous security agencies knew that Nigeria remains a secular
state and any attempt to turn the country into a refugee camp for
Christians will not be acceptable and will be resisted with every lawful
means,” the statement said.
Silence not golden
CAN
described the actions of the controversial pastor as a “mere expression
of his fundamental right, which every Nigerian is entitled to”.
“The
last time we checked, Sections 38-41 of the 1999 Constitution (as
amended) states clearly that every Nigerian is “entitled to freedom of
thought, conscience and religion, including freedom to change his
religion or belief, and freedom (either alone or in community with
others, and in public or in private) to manifest and propagate his
religion or belief in worship, teaching, practice and observance.
“The
Constitution states unambiguously that ‘Every person shall be entitled
to freedom of expression, including freedom to hold opinions and to
receive and impart ideas and information without interference’.
“Every
person shall be entitled to assemble freely and associate with other
persons, and in particular he may form or belong to any political party,
trade union or any other association for the protection of his
interests:
“Every citizen of Nigeria is entitled to move freely
throughout Nigeria and to reside in any part thereof, and no citizen of
Nigeria shall be expelled from Nigeria or refused entry thereby or exit
there …,” the statement said.
The association condemned the killings in southern Kaduna, describing it as genocide.
CAN
accused Vice President Osinbajo not speaking up against attacks on
Christians, saying his “studied silence is no longer golden.”
“It
is high time the overzealous security agencies knew that Nigeria
remains a secular state and any attempt to turn the country into a
refugee camp for Christians will not be acceptable and will be resisted
with every lawful means.
“We call on the acting President,
Professor Yemi Osinbajo, to intervene in all the clampdown on the Church
in Nigeria after all, he is in the office primarily to represent the
interest of the Christians and his studied silence is no longer golden,”
it said.
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