Methodist priest urges Buhari to tackle corruption
The Archbishop of Remo, Ijebu, Yewa and Egba, Methodist Church Nigeria, Luke Odubanjo, has called on the incoming President, Muhammadu Bu...
https://newshelmng.blogspot.com/2015/05/methodist-priest-urges-buhari-to-tackle.html
The Archbishop of Remo, Ijebu, Yewa and Egba, Methodist Church Nigeria,
Luke Odubanjo, has called on the incoming President, Muhammadu Buhari,
to tackle unemployment and corruption.
He made this call on Thursday in Abeokuta while briefing journalists on
the apostolic visit of the Prelate of the Methodist Church of Nigeria,
Dr. Chukwuemeka Uche, to Ogun State, beginning on Sunday, May 31.
The cleric said the incoming administration should provide jobs for the
teeming unemployed youths and block all the channels through which the
nation’s commonwealth was being siphoned so that the country could
witness a new dawn.
He said, “The Muhammadu Buhari’s administration should tackle the
problems of unemployment and corruption. No parent prays to spend so
much to send his children to school and those children still return and
still depend on that parent.
“Again, corruption starts from the family. So, the President, governors,
and legislators must all decide to end corruption by blocking all the
channels through which corrupt practices are exhibited. They all must
serve the people sincerely and kick corruption out of the system.”
He advised Buhari not to discriminate against any religion or political
party, but to carry everyone along in the interest of the nation.
Odubanjo, who said the Prelate would be in the state for seven days,
asked that the church be allowed to partner government in the area of
provision of education as government alone could not fund the sector.
He said there was the need for government to address infrastructural
decay and declining education quality in the nation’s institutions.
The cleric called on the state government to return missionaries schools
to their founders, adding that this would bring back discipline and
moral values into the education sector.
He said, “No government runs education alone. In so many climes, the
government allows individuals and churches to run education. We are
appealing to government to return all mission schools to their
founders.”
Odubanjo, who called on members of the church in the state to give the
Prelate a rousing welcome, said His eminence would also pay courtesy
visits to the state Governor, Ibikunle Amosun and the paramount ruler of
Egbaland, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo.