Ignore political defectors, Primate tells Buhari


Metropolitan and Primate of All Nigeria, Anglican Church, Most Reverend Nicholas D. OkohMetropolitan and Primate of All Nigeria, Anglican Church, Most Reverend Nicholas D. Okoh
The Most Rev. Nicholas Okoh, the Metropolitan and Primate of Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), has urged President-elect Muhammadu Buhari to stop giving attention to political defectors.
The archbishop made the appeal at the All Saints Anglican Cathedral, Onitsha, Anambra, on Sunday shortly after the consecration of three bishops.
“If I were the president–elect, I will not give attention to anybody because they are not people to be trusted; they lack credibility and are people who are destroying the country.
“They did not work for the party so why are they joining the party now,” Okoh said.
According to him, this administration is an incoming one, it has set its programmes and the one who needs advice is not the new government but Nigerians.
He said the administration needed the cooperation of all Nigerians to make its programmes a success.
“So we ask Nigerians to please cooperate with them in our own interest, because if we cooperate, they will do good work but if we don’t, they cannot do anything.
Okoh, however, urged the incoming government to keep to its campaign promises.
“We know that no government can touch everything in the comprehensiveness of human life; it is the duty of the incoming government to study areas embodiment in their campaign promises.
“I believe it was the manifesto that enabled them to win, so they should look at it and see that they implement it.”
To the newly consecrated bishops, Okoh advised them “to be sheppards and not a wolf to the flock of Christ.
“Feed the flocks and do not devour them; seek the lost, uphold the weak, restore health to the sick, lift the down trodden, ensure discipline but forget not mercy”.
He thanked Governor Willie Obiano for being committed to neutralising the frosty relationship between the Roman Catholic and the Anglican Churches in Anambra.
In an address, Obiano said that this was the first time he had witnessed the consecration of bishops.
He reminded them that the flock they would oversee “is everybody under your jurisdiction, not minding religious or ethnic affiliations”.
“You must not exploit the flock, but must grow the flock, be honest with them if you want them to respect and obey you and be compassionate,” the governor said.
The newly consecrated bishops are Moses Tabawaye as the Bishop of Gwagwalada; Johnson Ekwe as the Bishop of Niger West and Isaac Oluyamo as the Bishop of Ijesha North.

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