PHOTONEWS: A Suicide Attacker John Akpabu Arrested At The Radio House In Abuja
John Akpanum Akalu 39 the would-be suicide bomber of a ministerial briefing , arrested with 37 rounds of live ammunition and 3 hand granades and other explosives at the National Press Centre, Radio House in Abuja today.
In another news from Leadership-
"Police Arrest Suspect In Connection With BUK Attack
The Kano State Police Command yesterday said it has arrested Augustine Effiong (aka Abubakar Garba) as one of the suspects behind the recent attack on Christian followers at Bayero University Kano (BUK).
Effiong, an indigene of Akwa Ibom was born and brought up at Maiduguri before he later converted to Islam. The police said, “he has been transferred to Abuja for discreet investigations”.
The command said Effiong was arrested over an attempt to murder a civilian at Danlasan Village in Warawa Local Government Area of Kano state.
During the preliminary investigation, the suspect, a resident of Bulunkutu Abuja Quaters in Maiduguri confessed to have relocated to the Kano state last April.
He also confessed to have participated in series of attacks, killings of policemen and military personnel in the state in the wake of attacks launched on Kano early this year". Culled from Leadership.
However, all these latest development should remind us about Pastor Kukah statement about the issue of Boko Haram.
BE STILL AND KNOW THAT I AM GOD (Ps 46:10): AN APPEAL TO
NIGERIANS BY REVEREND MATTHEW HASSAH KUKAH
On the occasion of the Carol of Nine Lessons organized by
NTA and Radio Nigeria on December 10th last year, I was invited to deliver the
message. I chose to speak on the theme, Do Not Be Afraid as a means of
encouraging our people against the backdrop of fear and frustration that was
mounting at the time. Since then, it would seem that things have gotten
progressively worse in our country. In the course of my reflections, I sought
to encourage my fellow citizens not to be frightened by the events of the time.
I insisted that despite these tragic and sad events and the situation of our
country, we needed to conquer fear. I argued that the message of Christmas was
a message about the good news of the birth of the Prince of Peace, Emmanuel,
(God-with us) and the Saviour of the world. Against the backdrop of other
developments in the country at that time, I concluded by calling on the federal
government not to carry through its plans for the removal of fuel subsidy.
Since then, things have gradually snowballed well beyond
what one had either feared or hoped. On Christmas day, a bomb exploded at St.
Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, in Niger State, killing over thirty people
and wounding a significant number of other innocent citizens who had come to
worship their God as the first part of their Christmas celebrations. Barely two
days later, we heard of the tragic and mindless killings within a community in
Ebonyi State in which over sixty people lost their lives with properties worth
millions of naira destroyed and hundreds of families displaced. In the midst of
all this, on New Year’s Day, the President announced the withdrawal of fuel
subsidy and threw an already angry and frustrated nation into convulsion.
Right now, I feel that perhaps like the friends of Job (Eliphaz,
Bildad and Zophar), who came to visit their sick friend and found the burden
beyond comprehension, we find ourselves in the same situation. For, as we know,
when they came and found Job in his condition, they spent seven days and seven
nights, and uttered not a word (Job 2:13). Right now, no one can claim a full
understanding of the state we are in. However, even if we cannot understand the
issues of the moment, our faith compels us to understand that God’s hand is in
all this. The challenge is for us to have the patience to let His will be done.
The tragedy in Madalla was seen as a direct attack on
Christians. When Boko Haram claimed responsibility, this line of argument
seemed persuasive to those who believed that these merchants of death could be
linked to the religion of Islam. Happily, prominent Muslims rose in unison to
condemn this evil act and denounced both the perpetrators and their acts as
being un-Islamic. All of this should cause us to pause and ponder about the
nature of the force of evil that is in our midst and to appreciate the fact
that contrary to popular thinking, we are not faced with a crisis or conflict
between Christians and Muslims. Rather, like the friends of Job, we need to
humbly appreciate the limits of our human understanding.
In the last few years, with the deepening crises in parts of
Bauchi, Borno, Kaduna, and Plateau states, thanks to the international and
national media, it has become fanciful to argue that we have crises between
Christians and Muslims. Sadly, the kneejerk reaction of some very uninformed
religious leaders has lent credence to this false belief. To complicate
matters, some of these religious leaders have continued to rally their members
to defend themselves in a religious war. This has fed the propaganda of the
notorious Boko Haram and hides the fact that this evil has crossed religious
barriers. Let us take a few examples which, though still under investigation
across the country, should call for restraint on our part.
Some time last year, a Christian woman went to her own
parish Church in Bauchi and tried to set it ablaze. Again, recently, a man
alleged to be a Christian, dressed as a Muslim, went to burn down a Church in
Bayelsa. In Plateau State, a man purported to be a Christian was arrested while
trying to bomb a Church. Armed men gunned down a group of Christians meeting in
a Church and now it turned out that those who have been arrested and are under
interrogation are in fact not Muslims and that the story is more of an internal
crisis. In Zamfara State, 19 Muslims were killed. After investigation it was
discovered that those who killed them were not Christians. Other similar
incidents have occurred across the country.
Clearly, these are very troubled times for our country. But
they are also very promising times. I say so because amidst this confusing
debris of hate, anger and frustration, we have had some very interesting
dimensions.
Nigeria is changing because Nigerians are taking back their
country from the grip of marauders. These stories, few as they may be, are the
beginning of our song of freedom. Christians are now publicly crossing the
artificial lines created by falsehood and bigotry. Let us take a few examples
of events in the last week alone:
In Kano, amidst fears and threats of further attacks on
Christians, a group of Muslims gathered round to protect Christians as they
worshipped. In Minna and recently, in Lagos, the same thing repeated itself as
Christians joined hands to protect Muslims as they prayed. In the last week,
Christians and Muslims together in solidarity are protesting against bad
governance and corruption beyond the falsehood of religion. Once freed from the
grip of these dark forces, religion will be able to play its role as a force
for harmony, truth and the common good.
Clearly, drawing from our experiences as Christians, we must
note that God has a message for us in all this. To elicit what I consider to be
the message, I will make reference to three lessons and I know there are far
more. First, these times call for prayer. At the height of our confusion during
the Abacha years, the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria composed two sets
of prayers; one, Against Bribery and Corruption and second, for Nigeria in
Distress. Millions of Catholics have continued to recite these prayers and we
must remain relentless in the belief that God hears our prayers and that God’s
ways are not our ways. We know that our Muslim brethren and millions of other
non-Christians feel the same and are also praying in a similar way for our
country.
Two, these times call for solidarity of all people of faith.
We are a nation of very strong believers and despite what anyone else may say,
millions of our Christians and Muslims do take their religion very seriously.
However, you might ask, if that is true, why do we have so many killings in the
name of
God and of religion? My answer is that we have such killings
because we live in an environment of a severely weak architecture of state
which allows evil to triumph. It is this poverty that produces jealousy and
hatred which leads to violence.
We live in a state of ineffective law enforcement and tragic
social conditions. Corruption has destroyed the fabric of our society. Its
corrosive effect can be seen in the ruination of our lives and the decay in our
society. The inability of the state to punish criminals as criminals has
created the illusion that there is a conflict between Christians and Muslims.
In fact, it would seem that many elements today are going to great extremes to
pitch Christians against Muslims, and vice versa, so that our attention is
taken away from the true source of our woes: corruption. As Nigerians,
Christians and Muslims, we must stand together to ensure that our resources are
well utilized for the common good. This is why, despite the hardships we must
endure as a result of the strike, the Fuel Subsidy debate must be seen as the
real dividend of democracy.
Three, religious leaders across the faiths must indeed stand
up together and face the challenge of the times by offering a leadership that
focuses on our common humanity and common good rather than the insignificant
issues that divide us. We therefore condemn in very strong terms the tendency
by some religious leaders to play politics with the issues of our collective
survival. Rather than rallying our people, some of our religious leaders have
resorted to divisive utterances, wild allegations and insinuations against
fellow adherents of other religions. In the last five or so days, text messages
have been circulating across the country appealing to some of our worst demons.
We are told that many senior clerics either believed or encouraged the
circulation of these divisive and false text messages. We must condemn this for
what it is; a grand design by enemies within our folds who are determined to
destroy our country. Whatever they may call themselves, they are neither true
Christians nor Muslims.
For those Christians who have reacted in fear, they require
conversion. If we wait for these evil men or women to decide when we shall
stand for Christ, then we have surrendered our soul to the devil. If we fear to
stand up for Christ now, let us remember that He has already said: Whoever
acknowledges me before others, I will acknowledge before my father in Heaven,
Whoever denies me before others, I will deny him before my father in Heaven(Mt
10: 32). Again, Jesus warns that rather than fear at times of uncertainty,
adversity or upheavals, we should be confident. He said: When these things
begin to take place, stand erect; hold your heads high, because your liberation
is near at hand(Lk. 21: 28). Furthermore, St Paul has assured us that; If we
die with Him, we shall live with Him. If we endure with Him, we shall reign
with him( 2 Tim 2: 11-12). Surely, those who are asking us to go under our
beds, to flee in the face of persecution must be reading a different Bible.
These are difficult times but they are also times of
promise. Our country has turned its back on all forms of dictatorships. Our
hands are on the plough and we are resolutely committed to democracy. Like a
Catholic marriage, we may not be happy but we cannot contemplate a divorce. God
does not make mistakes.
Although the freedom and growth promised by democracy are
not here yet, we must remind ourselves that a better tomorrow is possible, a
more united and peaceful Nigeria is possible. The challenges of the last few
days have shown the resilience of our people and their commitment to democracy
and a better life. We believe this is possible. The government must strive to
earn the trust of our people. All sides must take lessons from the
demonstrations and resolve to build a better and stronger nation. Let us hold
on to the words of the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI when he told the
President, religious, traditional rulers and people of the Republic of Benin in
the Presidential Palace on the 19th of November: Do not cut off your peoples
from their future by mutilating their present....There are too many scandals
and injustices, too much corruption and greed, too many errors and lies, too
much violence. All peoples desire to understand the political and economic
choices which are made in their name; they wish to participate in good
governance. No economic regime is ideal and no economic choice is neutral. But
these must always serve the common good.
* Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese
I do not believe this in any way, this is a ploy to divert out attention fellow Nigerians. Do not fall for this at all.
ReplyDeleteThat guy must v been bribed by d so called islamic boko haram.
ReplyDelete