Nigerian bishops ask their president for action on Christians' rights
Friday, May 6, 2016
"It is a herculean task for Christians to obtain certain certificates to build churches in some northern states."
By ACN staff
NEW YORK—Nigeria’s Catholic bishops have in no uncertain terms asked their
new president to enact and enforce policies that—in accordance with the country’s
constitution—would guarantee fair treatment of Christians in the north of the
country where they are often relegated to second-class status.
Meeting May
2, 2016 with President Muhammadu Buhari, the bishops’ demands—voiced in a statement
signed by Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama, president of the Catholic Bishops’
Conference of Nigeria—included Church-state collaboration in the “reconstruction
of post-Boko Haram Nigeria;” a measure of state support for Church-run schools,
which in many cases serve a significant number of Muslim students; and, in
northern Nigeria, the removal of obstruction of official permission for the
Church to obtain land and build churches.
The bishops
also ensured President Buhari of their commitment to “turning our country
around” with regard to finding ways to combat widespread and worsening poverty
affecting Christians and Muslims alike. The prelates also called for urgent
action to tackle the persistent trend of violent clashes over the control of
land between nomadic peoples and farmers.
With regard to
education, Archbishop Kaigama asked the President for greater state support for
Church-run schools, insisting that “children under our care who are citizens of our great country, in our
faith- based institutions should enjoy similar privileges and not suffer any
form of deprivation or discrimination because they happen to be in institutions
run by faith-based organizations.”

He continued: “There was a time when
a healthy relationship existed between government and faith-based organizations
in running schools and health institutions. Today, all sorts of levies are
slammed on our institutions and the children. Instead of supporting faith-based
institutions as is done in other countries, we experience what seems to suggest
that mission schools are some sort of unhealthy competitors and the students
are less Nigerian than those in public schools.”
The archbishop also charged that it
is “a herculean task for Christians to obtain certain certificates to build
churches in some northern states.”
Just prior to meeting with President
Buhari, Bishop Matthew Kukah of the Diocese of Sokoto in northern Nigeria
commented that Church-run schools have a great potential as places where
Christians and Muslims can mingle and form bonds of friendship.
Part of the
problem, the bishop said, is that Muslims in the north simply are not exposed
to Christians at all, a phenomenon which has led to the persistence of a
negative view of Christianity as an inferior religion associated with Western exploitation
of the country in the colonial era.
President Buhari greets Bishop Matthew Kukah; photo courtesy of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Nigeria
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