As
the row over the proposed preaching bill in Kaduna gathers steam, the
Governor of the state, Nasir El-Rufai has received another word of
caution.
Nasir El-Rufai
The Kaduna State Chapter of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria,
on Tuesday, said the over 5,000 pastors in the PFN would rather obey
God than obey the proposed preaching bill currently before the state
House of Assembly when passed into law.
The state PFN chairman, Prof. Femi Ehinmidu, who spoke at a
stakeholders’ roundtable conference in Kaduna, expressed concern on the
bill being sponsored by the state government.
Ehinmidu told the state government to be ready to jail the over
5,000 pastors in the state’s PFN if the government believed it could
muzzle the citizens to pass the bill into law.
He argued that the bill remained a recipe for crisis in the state when passed into law.
Ehinmidu pointed out that unless the government carried out wider
consultations among critical stakeholders, the bill, which he claimed
started on a faulty note, was bound to fail.
The Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, has, however,
cautioned religious leaders against politicising the bill before the
Assembly.
El-Rufai told the stakeholders that the preaching bill he sent to
the state Assembly had no intention of banning evangelism in the state
but aimed at curbing emerging religious extremism.
Speaking at the Roundtable Forum, organised by a non-governmental
organisation, Carefronting Nigeria, with the support of the Canadian
High Commission, el-Rufai, who was represented by his Special Assistant
on Media and Publicity, Mr. Samuel Aruwan, said the bill was informed by
the government’s concern for security of lives and property.
The forum was tagged Kaduna State Religious Preaching Regulation Bill: Intention and Perception.
The governor said the government had no ill feeling towards the
views of the Christian Association of Nigeria, the Jama’atul Nasril
Islam and other critical stakeholders, who had made genuine positions on
the matter.
He added that some people had started politicising the good intention of government to restore peace in the state.
He explained that the bill, when passed into law, would allow the
Christian Association of Nigeria and the Jama’atu Nasir Islam to check
strange ideological beliefs that were not in tandem with Christianity
and Islam.
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