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NASS To Enact Law Against Religious Extremism
The Senate President, Sen. David Mark, says the National Assembly is willing and ready to enact a law to address religious extremism in Nigeria.
Mark made this known at a reception organised in honour of Cardinal John Onaiyekan on his 30th Episcopal ordination and his recent elevation to the College of Cardinals in Abuja on Sunday.
He said that the National Assembly was willing to make the religious environment much friendlier by enacting laws that would fight all forms of religious intolerance and extremism in the society.
The senate president said that the legislature was holistically looking at the issue of immorality in the society without preference to any particular one. “We are ready to support religious activities that will foster unity in the country, we are ready to make laws that will fight religious extremism in the country,” he said.
Mark said that the senate had already passed the bill on gay marriage and was awaiting the report of the House of Representatives before it would be sent to the executive.
Earlier in his homily at the church service, Onaiyekan reminded Nigerians of the need for religious tolerance and mutual respect.
He said tolerance and mutual respect would help in building peace and harmony amongst Nigerians irrespective of their backgrounds and status in the society.
The cardinal spoke against the practise of what he described as `the religion of exclusion’.
In the same vein, the President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN), Most Rev. Ignatius Kaigama, called on Nigerians to use religion to fight social and moral vices in the society. Kaigama, who is the Archbishop of Jos, said that issues of corruption, kidnapping, drug addiction and terrorism, could be fought using the instrumentality of religion.
He decried the use of religion to cause disaffection, violence and destruction in parts of the country, stating that Nigerians possessed the capacity to use religion for the good of the society, the transformation of the economy and the moral development of the citizenry.
Kaigama urged all Nigerians to take advantage of the positive image created for Nigeria by Onaiyeka’s recognition by Vatican and reverse all the negative stories told about their nation. “Nigerians must ride on this wave of positive international recognition to correct the negative image of the country in the international community,” he said.
He advised the cardinal not to relent in the good works that had earned him many accolades both within and outside Nigeria. Kaigama urged the cardinal to be more vocal in the church’s condemnation of sexual immorality, same sex marriage, corruption and other ills affecting different communities across the globe.