President
Goodluck Jonathan’s proposal to meet with a cross-section of Muslim
leaders in the southwest at the Ansarudeen Central Mosque, Ajao
Surulere, Lagos State, has met a brick wall, with most of the religious
figures indicating their reluctance to attend. A source close to
Jonathan told Sahara Reporters that, unless there was a miraculous
change of heart, the meeting is unlikely to hold.
Sources said former Minister of State for Defense, Musiliu Obanikoro,
had arranged the meeting. Obanikoro now faces growing public opprobrium
over his inglorious role in the rigging of last year’s governorship
election in Ekiti State. The former minister is one of several
politicians of the PDP caught on tape as they ordered a top military
officer, Brigadier A. Momoh, to harass members of the APC in Ekiti in a
scheme designed to secure victory for Ayo Fayose, the candidate of the
PDP.
In a telephone
conference, the secretary general of the Supreme Council for Islamic
Affairs, Ishaq Oloyede, lauded the decision of Muslim leaders not to
participate in a meeting designed to polarize and create disunity among
Muslims across the geographical divide.
Northern Muslim leaders, including emirs, had earlier opposed a meeting
of all Muslim leaders with Mr. Jonathan. Their objection had scuttled an
earlier meeting the president had proposed with the entire Muslim
leaders in the country. Two major Muslim leaders in the southwest
disclosed that a meeting between and Mr. Jonathan would be a betrayal of
the general decision not to draw Muslim leaders in the country into
partisan conflicts.
The Muslim leaders also remarked that Mr. Jonathan’s alleged gift of N7
billion to the leaders of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) to
encourage them to mobilize political support for the president’s
re-election had left CAN in tatters. “It may take a long time before the
wound inflicted on the umbrella organization for all Nigerian
Christians is healed,” said one Muslim leader.
Another Muslim leader told SaharaReporters that it was shameless to go
about distributing money that belongs to the masses to a few religious
leaders. “We want the money to be used to better the lot of all
Nigerians,” said the source, an Islamic cleric in Abeokuta.
One of the Muslim leaders also said it was difficult to trust Mr.
Jonathan who had reneged on his promise to redress the marginalization
of Muslims in the composition of last year’s national conference. “When
we complained about it, Mr. President promised to redress it, but he
went back on his words when CAN President, Ayo Oritsejafor, told him to
ignore us.”
Some of the Muslim leaders stated that Mr. Jonathan had always ignored
the pleas of Muslims for fairness and equity in appointments to top
political appointments. “He never sent an invitation to us to meet with
him before. Why is he now enthusiastic to meet Muslims [a] few weeks to
the election,” one source asked.
SaharaReporters learned that the chief imam of Ansarudeen mosque,
Abdurahman Ahmad, was given the assignment of telling Mr. Jonathan and
his team that the southwest Muslim leaders were not enthusiastic about
meeting him.
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