Must Read: An Open Letter To President Muhammad Buhari From Archbishop Alfred Adewale Martins On The Incessant Killings Of Nigerian By Suspected Herdsmen


THE TEXT OF AN OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI GCFR.  PRESIDENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA AND COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF OF THE NIGERIAN ARMED FORCES ON THE OCCASION OF A  SOLIDARITY RALLY EMBARKED UPON BY THE CATHOLIC ARCHDIOCESE OF  LAGOS TO DENOUNCE THE INCESSANT KILLING OF INNOCENT NIGERIANS  BY SUSPECTED HERDSMEN. TUESDAY MAY 22, 2018.



Your Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari;  On behalf of the entire Priests, Religious and Lay Faithful of the Catholic Archdiocese  of Lagos, I wish to use this medium to convey to you, Mr President, our sadness and  deep displeasure over the incessant killings and general insecurity being experienced  across the length and breadth of our dear country Nigeria but especially in the North  Central part of the nation in recent times. We are very saddened by the fact that our  security Agencies have not been able to put measures in place to bring the situation  under control. Instead, the signals we are getting are that we do not have enough  number of personnel to secure all the people of Nigeria. In the meantime, farmers  cannot go to their farms, neither are they safe in their villages. We hear reports of the  killers attacking the villages and feeding the yams in the barns of the inhabitants to  their cattle. The height of it is that now they have pushed their boundaries to attacking  people in their places of worship. If it was Boko haram, as we know it, it would have  been sad but not as alarming as when so-called herdsmen are the ones perpetrating  these crimes. Most disturbingly, our security agencies seem incapable of dealing with  the situation

Mr. President, many Nigerians embraced happily the change mantra upon which they  elected your government to power and they welcomed you with open hands and  minds, with much hope for a new vista of life for our countrymen and women. Three  years after, Your Excellency, our people now live in palpable fear especially because  of the killer-herdsmen who actually qualify to be called terrorists. We watch helplessly  as our hope for a better tomorrow trickles away in the hands of herdsmen who are  proving to be deadlier than even the Boko Haram, if they are not Boko haram in  another guise. Innocent people are now being murdered at will and their means of  livelihood forcefully taken from them. Children are being turned to orphans, wives to widows, husbands to widowers. Communities are being wiped away in manners that  can only be likened to ethnic cleansing. Human life, a most sacred gift from God, has  become of less value than that of cattle in this part of the world. This is unacceptable!

Being a secular nation, our constitution clearly provides for freedom of worship without  fear or favour in any and all parts of the nation. Alas, in some parts of the country this  is not the case in practice. We watch helplessly as thousands of people in communities  that are predominantly Christian, particularly in Southern Kaduna and the North  Central parts of the country are being massacred, displaced from their ancestral lands  and treated as second class citizens. In many towns and rural areas, people of these  predominantly Christian communities are victims of religious intolerance as they are  denied rights to own lands to build their Churches and worship their God in peace.  Out of all the girls that were kidnapped at Dapchi, Leah Shaibu stands out as the one  yet to be released simply because she is Christian and has refused to deny her faith.  Unfortunately, incidents such as these have led to the fear of an agenda to Islamize  Nigeria. Permit me to say, Your Excellency, that you are often accused of being in  support of this agenda. We are confident that you would not fail to discharge yourself  from such accusations in a way that would be crystal clear to all.

Mr President, today, Tuesday May 22, 2018, is a watershed in the annals of Catholicism  in our country Nigeria. It is a day the entire Catholic Church in Nigeria speaks out, in  a practical way, against injustices, insecurity, nepotism and other vices plaguing our  dear country. Today, we rise in unity to express our solidarity with our brothers and  sisters who have been killed, and are still being killed, across the country. Most  especially, we mourn with heavy hearts the murder of two of our priests, Rev. Frs.  Joseph Gor and Felix Tyolaha and seventeen lay faithful who were mowed down last  month, April 16, while attending an early morning Mass at St Ignatius Catholic Church,  Ukpor-Mbalom, Gwer Local Government of Benue State. By these killings, the  perpetrators, who unfortunately are still roaming about freely, have further desecrated  all that we hold dear as Christians and dared us to do our worst. As these men and  women of faith are committed to mother earth today in Makurdi, we bid them  perpetual rest in the bosom of our Lord, even as we say with one voice, enough is enough. We can no longer stay still and watch our fellow humans butchered like  chickens.

Mr. President, the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN), in its most recent  letter to you, posed some very strong questions: ‘How can the federal Government  stand back while its security agencies deliberately turn a blind eye to the cries and  wails of helpless and armless citizens who remain sitting ducks in their homes, farms,  highway and now, even in their sacred places of worship? Weeks later, we are still  waiting for answers to these questions. Left defenceless, the ordinary Nigerians get  killed while the politicians and the privileged ones go about with security details.

Permit me, Sir, to say that without any doubt, the Catholic Church in Nigeria has a  long history of restraint in its engagement with governments of the country over the  years. As partners in progress, we have always maintained integrity and restraint in  the manner we react and respond to issues bordering on security and religious  harmony. We believe strongly in the preservation of human life. We have consistently  been advocates of peace, religious tolerance and inter-religious dialogue with other  religions. We have always provided a cordial atmosphere for robust discussions and  genuine efforts at ensuring national cohesion. Unfortunately, it is sad to note that we  have frequently been at the receiving end of attacks; the most recent being the callous  killings in Benue State. Mr. President, we have been provoked far too many times and  now we say again, ‘Enough is enough.’

As an institution that upholds the sanctity of human life and the promotion of peace  and good neighborliness with all people, in obedience to the teachings of Jesus Christ,  we want to state categorically that we shall continue to preach restraint and tolerance  amongst our members. However, let it be known that our insistence on dialogue and  peaceful conduct is not only in obedience to Christ but also in recognition of the truth  of the saying attributed to the great Mahatma Gandhi that ‘An eye for an eye only
ends up making the whole world blind.’ We recognize the strength in seeking and  insisting on peaceful resolution of problems and so we hope that will not be taken for  granted.

Justice cries out for all the innocent Nigerians who have died in the hands of the gun  totting herdsmen. We are aware that the Vice President recently promised that the  Federal Government would undertake the rebuilding of the places that were destroyed  by the killer-herdsmen in Benue State and hopefully in other similar places. 

We hope  that people will also be compensated for the loss of their farm produce and of their  properties so that the Internally Displaced People who have been turned to beggars  will get justice and restoration to normal life. Very importantly, we urge you, Mr  President, to direct the security agencies to wake up, fish out the perpetrators of these  callous killings and neutralize them so that people can once again feel safe. We pride  ourselves with having some of the best security agencies in the world. This is the time  for them to prove their mettle by bringing an end to these killings.  

Mr President, that time has come for you to act fast and put to rest all the insinuations  being pandered all over about you. We reiterate that our call for your urgent  intervention is borne out of our deep patriotism and desire to save the country from  imminent crisis that could snowball into ethnic, tribal or religious war. May the Lord  grant you the wherewithal to carry out your duties and bring peace, security and  growth to the nation. 
Archbishop Alfred MARTINS 
 Archbishop of Lagos 
FOR AND ON BEHALF OF OVER 3 MILLION CATHOLICS OF THE  ARCHDIOCESE OF LAGOS