
President Muhammadu Buhari and Bishop Kukah
President Muhammadu Buhari has been accused of failing Nigerians by
 not fulfilling his campaign promises and bringing back ethnicity which 
Nigerians felt they had overcome.
Mathew Kukah, bishop of Sokoto diocese of the Catholic church made 
the accusation in a letter addressed to President Muhammadu Buhari.
According to The Cable, in a letter to the president, the cleric 
said Nigerians have never been so alienated from one another. Kukah said
 during his campaign, Buhari promised to fight corruption and make the 
nation secure but he has fallen short of expectations.
“You know sir, that you rode into town like a knight in shining
 armour, carrying the joys, pains, anxieties and fears of a people whose
 broken dreams had littered and turned the landscape into a 
kaleidoscopic scenery of desolation and despair,” he said.
“In your campaigns, you promised to restore a sense of national
 pride in us by slaying the dragon of corruption, banishing the 
retrogressive scourge of Boko Haram, bringing back our daughters from 
Chibok and making our country and citizens truly safe.
“We waited in hope right to the end of the first year, but 
somehow, amidst some hazy weather, all we heard was the sound of 
screeching tyres with the plane carrying our hopes seemingly unable to 
take off. It finally did but we had barely gained altitude when sickness
 struck and you spent the better part of a year seeking healing.
“The nation prayed for you and miraculously, you recovered. 
Evidently, you had been saved for a purpose. Our prayer is that this 
realisation will help you understand that you have a date with history 
and divine judgment. For now, before your eyes and in your hands, our 
country, our communities, our people are all in a state of stupor. We 
have never felt so alienated from one another. The bogeyman of religion,
 region and ethnicity, which we thought we had overcome by the sheer 
nature of your support base, has come back with a vengeance to haunt and
 threaten the very foundation of our existence.
“Mr President, you are too distant from your people. There is a
 sad feeling that you do not share in the pain and suffering of your 
people. You must very quickly find a way of connecting with your people 
before the devil takes over the space. For taking on this challenge and 
connecting with Nigerians.”
The bishop also asked politicians to desist from the practice of enriching themselves from the government’s purse.
“The average age of governors and legislators across the 
country is 50. These are the years of dreams, maturity, sacrifice, 
patriotism and self-giving,” he wrote.
“But, sadly, you do not seem ready to depart from the culture 
of cronyism, prebendalism and primitive accumulation. The result has 
been ruination and decay.
“I appeal to you to please abandon the spirit of selfish 
accumulation and embrace the principles of integrity and genuine service
 of our country. Do not let this country collapse in your hands. For 
accepting to make some sacrifice, respect and listen to our people.”
He appealed to Nigerians not to succumb to pressure and allow the rich or the political class divide them.
Kukah reminded them that God has plans for all of them.
“But you yourself, no matter how rich or poor, how educated or 
otherwise you are, have a duty to understand that God has plans for you 
and for every individual and you have a duty to both yourself and your 
neighbour,” he said.
“You have to defend your personal dignity and seek the 
enforcement of your rights to have property and to raise a family as 
opposed to waiting for the crumbs from our greedy leaders. “Defend your 
dignity as human beings and children of God. Do not allow the rich and 
powerful, who are rich because you are poor, to divide you.
“They have light and water in their high fenced houses, not 
because they are Muslims or Christians or that they are from this or 
that or the other tribe but simply because they are rich. You are poor, 
homeless, have no road, no water, and your children are sick and 
illiterate, not because you are Christian or Muslim or from this tribe 
or the other, but simply because you are poor.
“You and your children vote, but their children do not vote 
because they are abroad. Your children beg and die on the streets while 
their children are abroad, fraternizing with those they call infidels. 
They give you a fake religion that enslaves you while they give their 
own children the religion of education that will liberate them and make 
them rule over you. Rise and defend your right to food and shelter 
because poverty is not a divine inheritance.”
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