Nigeria: the twin evils of corruption and Boko Haram
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Christians are just as involved in corruption as Muslims. It is a national problem and something must be done about it.
Archbishop Ignatius
Kaigama heads the Archdiocese of Jos, Nigeria and serves as the president of
the country’s bishops’ conference. With the largest population is Africa,
Nigeria—20 million of whose approx. 170 million citizens are Catholic—plays a
pivotal role on the continent as it confronts the challenge of endemic
corruption and the ongoing threat of Boko Haram. The prelate spoke June 22,
2016 with international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need.
By Maria Lozano
You recently called on newly-elected President
Muhammadu Buharu to ensure that Nigeria remain a “multi-religious country” in
which everyone is free to practice their beliefs. Is religious freedom in
danger in Nigeria?
The President
has vowed to protect religious freedom. However,
on the level of individual states—and especially in the primarily Muslim
north—there is discrimination. For example, Muslim students have their own mosques,
while the Christians have to hold their services in classrooms. There is
religious instruction for Muslims, but what about for Christians? They do not
have the same options. Furthermore, the government does not make it easy for
the Christians in the north to build new churches and the Christians do not
even have the authorization to buy land privately.
Christians are
denied access to a Christian education because of narrow-minded religious
prejudices. This means that we create people without faith, without established
morals, who can be dangerous for society. We want everyone to be strengthened
in their faith and religious identity, to ensure the formation of better
citizens for the good of society.

Your message
to the president also concerned corruption and the terrorist organization Boko
Haram.
Both are so
dangerous. They undermine the unity and the entire identity of the country.
When you let Boko Haram be successful, you destabilize the country. Nigeria is
then no longer Nigeria, the magnificent country that it should be. Corruption
goes back much further than Boko Haram and it causes the same kind of damage.
It eats its way deep into the system, prevents any kind of progress,
destabilizes the work of the government and promotes suffering and hardship,
which in turn give rise to violence and conflicts. And Christians are just as
involved in corruption as Muslims. It is a national problem and something must
be done about it.
We do believe
that President Buhari is working to tackle these fundamental problems. We have
long been praying for the embattled Nigeria. We also composed a prayer against
corruption. We have prayed it for years and I believe that God has heard our
prayers. Something is being done against corruption, and Boko Haram is being
combatted. Our prayers have been answered.
Vocations are
booming in Nigeria. That must give you hope.
We thank God
for the gift of vocations. We have been blessed with vocations, our churches
are full and we thank God for this. We would like to return the gift6 that we
were given by the missionaries from Europe. The missionary work here is done and now we feel that we have something to give. The
West should not be afraid to ask us for help. We are ready to help with our
priests.
Archbishop Kaigama; ACN photo
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