2019: Muhammadu Buhari cautions religious, traditional leaders against partisan politics
President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday cautioned religious and traditional leaders against partisan politics, saying they risk losing their public esteem if they keep taking sides.
“Having witnessed the roles our religious leaders have been playing so far, I appeal to them to eschew partisan politics and appeal to their respective members to read the manifestos of each political party, discuss and pray for God’s guidance before casting their votes,” Buhari said during an interfaith conference.
“Religious leaders should not be seen to involve themselves in partisan politics or political controversies. Otherwise they risk losing their status and public respect,” he added.
Buhari met with religious leaders at an interfaith seminar in Abuja. Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury in England, was present at the event and delivered a keynote. John Onaiyekan, leader of the Catholic Church in Nigeria, and Sa’ad Abubakar, Sultan of Sokoto, were also present, according to a dispatch from the State House Saturday afternoon.
He also extended the warning to traditional rulers, admonishing them to encourage people in their community to be critical of political party messages and reach an informed position before voting for candidates.
“On their part, traditional rulers are also requested to enlighten their subjects, encourage them to ask questions and seek clarifications before going out to vote.
The advice comes two days after some religious leaders helped settle a long-standing animosity between former president Olusegun Obasanjo and Atiku Abubakar. Abubakar emerged presidential candidate of the opposition People’s Democratic Party, last Sunday.
Matthew Kukah, the Catholic Archbishop of Sokoto, David Oyedepo of the Living Faith Church, and Abubakar Gumi, an Islamic scholar and cleric, were present during the historic truce at Obasanjo’s residence in Abeokuta.
Whether Buhari’s condemnation of religious leaders’ involvement in politics had anything to do with the role played by the religious leaders in settling the dispute between Obasanjo and Abubakar was not immediately apparent in his comments, but the presidency and the ruling All Progressives Congress have strongly criticised the reconciliation.
Some of the president’s supporters have also attacked the religious leaders for playing a key role in the reconciliation, which many saw as constituting a major boost to Abubakar’s campaign.
Gumi pushed back against such insinuations on Saturday, telling newsmen his intervention was purely on the basis of his faith as a true Muslim.







