Presidency Thanks Pastor Adeboye For Leading ‘Prayer Walk’ Against Insecurity

The presidency has thanked the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye, and the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) for acknowledging that all lives lost to Boko Haram insurgency and banditry are “sacred” regardless of whether they’re Christian or Muslim. 

The presidency was reacting to the recent “prayer walk” staged by Pastor Adeboye and CAN in protest against incessant killings arising from worsening insecurity in the country. 

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The presidency, in a statement by Garba Shehu, said the prayer walk represents the right of all Nigerians to express their views on matters of religion, ethics, politics, and society.

The presidency noted that the peace walk originated from the “shocking, unacceptable death of Pastor Lawan Andimi at the hands of Boko Haram.”

“The President feels their pain, and that of his family, for his loss,” Shehu said in the statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday.

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“The duty of all of us is to uphold the rights of others to worship according to their faith – and to respect the rights of each other to do so freely in the spirit of brotherhood and respect – and without interference.

“This means, however, that we must stop false claims that only serve to divide one community against the other.

“There is no place in Nigeria for those who politicise religion. This is the President’s message to both Muslim and Christian communities alike.”

Shehu further described the CAN-inspired prayers and street enlightenment as a welcome development, saying all well-meaning citizens should join the ongoing fight against terrorism, banditry, kidnapping and corrupt practices.

“In the light of this, the CAN-inspired prayers and street enlightenment in our cities are much welcome as sensitisers to the need for all citizens irrespective of faith, religion or language to accept their duty and role in law enforcement, to prevent crime in all its manifestations, be it corruption, theft, terrorism, banditry or kidnapping.

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“Without citizen involvement, there is no miracle with which less than half-a-million policemen can effectively protect a population of 200 million.

“CAN is right to arouse popular consciousness to this duty to the state.

“One more thing is this: it is the added need for citizen-consciousness to stand up for the nation. Only Nigerians can defend their nation against these abhorrent killings and all sorts of crimes worrying us as a nation.

“From the prayers and advocacy by CAN, citizens need to take an important lesson, which is, that our people must rally around the flag. Together, they rise to defeat the enemy and defend the state.

“In Nigeria, some groups rally against the government instead of the enemy. This is not right. It has the effect of playing into the hands of the enemy of the state.

“We will not defeat the terrorists, nor speed the return for those citizens, young and old taken by them by division in our own ranks. To pull apart is to play into the hands of the terrorists: this is what they want,’’ he said. 

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