2019: CAN asking Christians to vote against Muslim candidates myopic, unpatriotic, MURIC warns

CAN-1-1.png

CAN President Samson Ayokunle: Religionising politics as 2019 general elections approach, MURIC alleges.

Share with love

The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has warned the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) against its dangerous attitude of religionising politics in the country, even as the Christian body ironically claims politics must be separated from religion.

MURIC spoke in a statement issued in Lagos on Tuesday by its Director, Prof. Ishaq Akintola, saying that the CAN had begun subterranean mobilization of Christians in the country in preparation for the 2019 general elections just like it did, but failed to achieve any success at doing so against the Muslim and Hausa/Fulani’s Muhammadu Buhari in 2015.

In CAN’s most recent election-related stunt, particularly on social media, the nation’s most vocal Muslim rights group said, Christians were instructed to shun Muslim candidates (especially President Muhammadu Buhari) and to vote massively for Christian candidates instead.

Prof. Akintola said, “The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) condemns CAN’s resort to acrobatic religiosity in the political arena. It is parochial, pernicious, myopic and unpatriotic.

“Politicisation of religion will not take us anywhere in this country. It is to the glory of our gymnastic religiousity that we are clever devils today. In spite of the proliferation of churches and mosques on our streets, our paradoxical criminality has no equal under the sun. Is this the time to dig deeper into religious zealotry by indulging in religious politics?

“MURIC calls on Nigerians to reject CAN’s attempt to drag Nigeria into the abyss of another religious crisis over the 2019 general elections. It is crude, naïve and infantile. We urge citizens not to allow excellence to be sacrificed on the altar of mediocrity. Serious nations focus on result-oriented criteria like credibility, pedigree, ability to deliver, high level patriotism, farsightedness and industry. Nigeria should be the issue, not primordial sentiments like religion and ethnicity.

“MURIC’s advice to Nigerian Muslims: Don’t vote for religion. Shun ethnic blindness. After all, many of those who corruptly enriched themselves are Muslim politicians. Vote according to your conscience. Those who stole billions of naira from the public treasury did not think of their Muslim brothers when they were stealing. They were driven by egocentricity, not by their love for Islam. If a Christian candidate has the right qualities, vote for him. This is about Nigeria, not about the mosque. We will cross our bridges when we get to them.

“In a nutshell, we urge responsible Christians all over the country to ignore CAN’s pernicious and tortuous propaganda of ‘Christians vote for Christians’. Nigerian Muslims should vote for candidates trusted for delivery of the dividends of democracy, not for religion. Looters who try to deceive Nigerians in 2019 will have themselves to blame if Muslims, Christians and traditionalists can come together to shun corrupt elements in society during the 2019 elections. Imams, pastors and priests should publicly rain curses on looters to keep them at bay.”


Share with love
Top