Pastors encouraging corrupt leaders – Bakare
Convener,
Save Nigeria Group, Pastor Tunde Bakare, has accused some church
leaders in the country of aiding and abetting corruption.
The Serving Overseer of The Latter Rain
Assembly also said some churches not only encourage and harbour corrupt
individuals, but also receive ill-gotten money from them.
He said this while delivering a speech
in preparation for the first anniversary of the Occupy Nigeria Protest
in Lagos on Sunday.
He said, “The church has failed the
nation. Worst oppression is going on in the churches today. Most
churches encourage corrupt leaders by failing to tell them the truth and
collecting their money.”
Speaking on the theme, ‘Corruption and
the Soul of the Nation’, the lawyer regretted that corruption had robbed
the country of the chance to realise its potential.
He said, “It cripples a nation’s
character and drains her of substance. We are confronted daily with news
and reports of executive corruption in high places, assaulted with a
legal system that has long lost respect for the sacredness of justice.
“We have resorted to worshipping and
preserving certain sacred cows and even their sires. We have a social
system that makes a mockery of a country and her feeble efforts at
self-reclamation to the end that even her entire existence becomes a
running joke.
“This is not mere alarmism. Our country
has long been distorted by corruption and it has progressively eroded
her strength and undermined her potential.”
Bakare reiterated his call for the
convening of a national conference, saying it would help solve some of
the country’s socio-economic and political problems.
Recalling the protest against the fuel
subsidy removal in January last year, the Congress for Progressive
Change’s Vice-Presidential candidate for the 2011 presidential election
said it was a collective resolve by Nigerians to fight against injustice
and oppression.
He said, “The protest was unprecedented
that Nigerians across the country, irrespective of religion and ethnic
identification, resisted the subsidy removal on such a scale.
“From a little band of people who began
to protest and clamour that Nigeria must be occupied, it steadily grew
into a mammoth movement as each one told his neighbour that this was a
chance to snatch our country back. While it lasted, people were
energised. They wanted to question the answers they already had on the
state of affairs in the country.”\
Via Punch
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