No faith is superior, Tinubu woos CAN

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By Luminous Jannamike

The presidential candidate of All Progressives Congress, APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, yesterday met with the leadership of Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, in Abuja, vowing never to run his administration on religious bias should he win the 2023 election.

He assured them that in spite of his running mate being a Muslim like himself, no faith was superior.

The meeting, which is the second leg of CAN’s dialogue session with 2023 presidential candidates, provided the opportunity for the apex Christian body to present its ‘Charter for Future Nigeria’ to the APC standard bearer.

CAN President, His Eminence Archbishop Daniel Okoh, in his opening remarks, described the dialogue session as an opportunity to come together and review the collective understanding of the Nigerian crisis of development and governance and find a lasting solution.

On Tinubu’s entourage were his wife, Oluremi, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila; Governors Dave Umahi (Ebonyi), AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq (Kwara), Abdullahi Ganduje (Kano); Minister of Special Duties, Senator George Akume; and Senate Chief Whip, Orji Kalu, among others.

No faith is superior to others
Speaking at the meeting, Tinubu said despite his decision to pick a Muslim running mate, he saw all Nigerians as equals and as brothers and sisters in one national family.

He said: “This means no one is inherently inferior or superior to anyone else, regardless of faith, place of origin, social status and gender.

“Anyone, who does not hold this fair and equitable view, should not run for president in a country such as ours.

“You, as an organization and as individual leaders of CAN, are entrusted as the watch person of the welfare of this society from a Christian perspective; which means functioning in an atmosphere of charity, understanding, patience and wisdom.

“I understand the tremendous importance of your work and have nothing but the deepest respect for your selfless contributions to our national cause.

“I did not come here to flatter you. Yet, it is necessary to state that I see your work as essential. No society or nation can rightly function or achieve greatness without its moral and ethical fibre being properly intact.

Historical support for the Church
“My belief in the need for secular government and faith-based organizations to work for unity is not something adopted recently to benefit my campaign.

“This co-operative agenda describes my entire political career. As governor of Lagos, I partnered with Christians to improve lives and foster education. For instance, I returned mission schools to their owners, most of whom are Christians.

“I instituted yearly Christian Denomination Service at the Governor’s residence as we approached the new year. This tradition continues in Lagos. More importantly, we fostered an atmosphere of religious tolerance and inter-faith collaboration.

“My cabinet was diverse and talented. In the exercise of government, I did not give a thought to whether a team member was Christian or Muslim, Yoruba, Igbo or Arewa. I have never lent myself to baseless prejudice and discrimination.

“To do so would be a recipe for failure in the governance of a diverse society and I am not a man that is familiar with failure.

Shettima’s choice
“This brings me to the question on the minds of many here. Why Senator Kashim Shettima? Why a same faith ticket? Well, I did not choose Senator Shettima so that we could form a same faith ticket.

“The ticket was constructed as a same progressive and people-based ideology ticket.

“I offer a confession. I selected Senator Shettima thinking more about who would best help me govern. Picking a Christian running mate would have been politically easier.

“But the easy way is rarely the right one. The selection of a running mate is at once a very momentous yet very intimate decision.

“Resting such a key decision on religious affiliation as the primary weight did not sit well with me. I am not saying there were not good and adequate potential running mates of the Christian faith.

“What I am saying is that the times we inhabit do not lend themselves to the good or adequate. We have urgent problems that lend themselves not to a Christian or Muslim solution. We need the best solution.

“Every time I thought about it, and I did think a lot; I came to the same conclusion: Kashim Shettima His faith was immaterial. He is a brilliant man with superior intellectual capacity. He is studious and detailed-oriented.

“Enjoying excellent organization skills, Shettima fully understands the vital difference between governance and politics.

“This exceptionally gifted human being has humility of spirit, courage of his convictions and a strongly progressive world view in harmony with my own perspectives on government and its relationship to the governed.

“I trust the calibre of the man. I know the great lengths he went in fighting Boko Haram in his state. He did his best to protect the Christian community and rebuilt damaged churches.

“This man understands the value of our national diversity in all of its ramifications, including religious. He possesses the courage to stand up to those who would wreck that diversity and freedom.

Personal life
“I know people have reacted harshly to my selection. They have done so without knowing the man or giving him or me a fair chance. The rumour that this is some plot to suppress the Christian community is untrue and unfortunate.

“I can no more suppress the Christians of this nation than I can suppress the Christians in my own household, my very family. You all know my wife is Christian and a pastor.

“My children are Christians. I can no more disown them and their choice of faith than I can disown myself.

“As a husband and father to Christian wife and children, hearing such allegations is hurtful. However, that individual discomfort will not deter me from the job at hand.

Policies
“My team, Senator Shettima and I have drafted our Action Plan for Nigeria titled: Renewed Hope.

“This agenda is based on the progressive notion that our economy must be recalibrated to ensure better jobs and wages for people. That all are entitled to basic health care and education.

“We will combat hunger and poverty by growing more food and better rewarding farmers for their toil.

“We shall revive our industrial capacity to provide work for our growing urban population and to produce more of the things that we need. Where the private sector thrives, we will not attempt to fix what is not broken.

“Where it falters, government shall lend a hand to keep people employed and the economy vibrant. Where there is a gap, we must fill it so that we more fully employ our idle workforce and productive capacity.

“We must better tend to the poor, vulnerable and elderly by strengthening the social safety net.

“We shall end the fuel subsidy because it has become an unproductive policy favouring an elite that needs no favours while giving the people precious little.

“Funds that were previously used for the subsidy will be invested in public transportation and other infrastructure, education, and health.

“Fiscal power and authority shall be recalibrated to give the states more latitude to better fulfil their mandate of grassroots development and empowerment of people and local communities, This includes assessing each state’s best option regarding a more active role in crime prevention and law enforcement.

CAN
Also speaking, CAN’s Vice President, Rev. Stephen Baba-Panya, said the problem of Nigeria as a nation was mostly constitutional and partly managerial.“”We have to properly diagnose the constitutional roots of our problem as a people.

“The founders of an independent Nigeria in 1960 set for themselves and future generations of Nigerians a grand vision of a prosperous and united country founded on justice and equity.

”Today, that vision has not been realised. Nigeria is a poor and conflict-ridden country with neither justice nor equity,” he stressed.

Credit: VANGUARD.

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