Politics
Bishop Urges Nigerians To Learn From Sudan’s Crises
Nigerian politicians
have been urged not to use politics to advance religious issues to avoid the experience of Sudan, saying it may be detrimental to the unity of the country.
The Bishop of Kaji-Keji, Republic of South Sudan, Rt. Rev Anthony Poggo, who gave this indication last Friday in Port Harcourt, in an interview with The Tide, said Nigeria should learn from what happened in Sudan to avoid a religious war.
Bishop Poggo said the Boko Haram religious sect should be condemned by all irrespective of political religious and ethnic leanings, stressing that with the little he has read about their activities, it calls for caution, while security operatives should be equipped to deal with the situation.
Rt. Rev Poggo, who is on a 10-day visit to the Niger Delta North Diocese of the Anglican Communion, explained that the Sudanese war was caused by years of neglect, marginalisation and the imposition of Sharia Law on the predominantly Christian Southern Sudan.
The clergyman said although the war ended in 2005, with over five million people losing their lives, the two sides to the conflict signed a Comprehensive Peace Agreement leading to the January 9, 2011, referendum that gave birth to the independence of South Sudan.
According to him, “we had lived well before but the politicians used religion to achieve selfish aims and that politication of religious issues became the problem”.
He noted the years of war in sudan would have been avoided if the political class had listened to the yearnings of the people of the Southern Sudan.
“Like the Niger Delta region in Nigeria, south-sudan produces the oil that sustains the country, but their people are not involved”, he said emphasising that no refinery is built in the south. They are rather sited in the Northern part that does not have oil because they were in control of government.
He noted that the church is growing tremendously, under the new government, and with their prayerful support, there is hope, noting that a number of political parties exist, but the majority party is the Sudanese People Liberation Movement that had been at the forefront of the struggles for independence for the South Sudan.
On his mission to Rivers State, the religious leader disclosed that it was on the invitation of the Bishop of the Niger Delta North Diocese and Archbishop of the province of the Niger Delta and Rector of St Matthew’s Anglican Church Nkpogu Ven Isaac Tejevbo. He commended them for the useful discussions on how to partner to improve the missionary work in south sudan.