Governor Babatunde
Fashola of Lagos State, yesterday, condemned the demand by some Christian
religious groups in the state that a Christian should be his successor in 2015,
saying, “do they really believe in God?
It is only God that can insist.”
The state chapter of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, PFN, has recently called for a
Christian to succeed the governor in 2015.
Fashola, while declaring open an inter-faith conference in Lagos, with the theme: ‘Peace, Religious Harmony and Good Governance: Issues and Challenges’, argued that the insecurity in the nation would reduce drastically if everyone embraced religious harmony.
Fashola, while declaring open an inter-faith conference in Lagos, with the theme: ‘Peace, Religious Harmony and Good Governance: Issues and Challenges’, argued that the insecurity in the nation would reduce drastically if everyone embraced religious harmony.
According to him; “People
have said that they want one particular governor and I have ask myself two
questions – the people who said that they want one particular governor or said
that there must be this particular governor, are they still conscious that it
is an election where a choice has to be made? If there are two democrats, they
should expect that citizens must have a say in who is sworn-in as the governor
of their state.
“Secondly; I wonder
when I heard those things. You can insist, but can you insist that you will be
alive in the next one hour. I know that things can rub off badly, you may be on
the wrong side of the government policy, but we must trust ourselves.
“We have integrated
more than 50 years ago rather than toying with what we are doing at the moment.
The danger is too much, this cloth will not tear in one straight line; it will
tear in shreds if we pull it too far and let us restrain the pull on the cloth.
It is no longer a new cloth; it is a well worn cloth and when a well worn cloth
tears, it doesn’t repair well.”
The governor insisted
that religion should not be made as the yardstick to determine his successor,
saying “Good governance means different things to us. It may mean that there
are more religion institutions of one faith than the other in the state; that
maybe good governance for some people. And for majority, good governance is
just food, the ability to get a job and provision of social amenities. For
those people, the faith of the governor is never their problem.”
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