Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, John Cardinal Onaiyekan, has faulted
criticisms trailing the list of ministerial nominees sent to the Senate
by
President Muhammadu Buhari.
He described the criticisms as unnecessary.
According to him, what is needed in Nigeria are people, who can bring
positive change and not whether the nominees are recycled politicians
or old faces.
The cleric said this on the sidelines of a press conference organised
by Catholic Caritas Foundation of Nigeria, an agency the Catholic
Church, on its fifth anniversary and its plans for Sustainable
Development Goals in Nigeria.
Onaiyekan said, “The change I am looking for is a change that will
make Nigeria better; a change in which the ways of doing things will be
different; and a change that will entail a different way of looking at
and handling political power. This change can take place with recycled
faces, it can take place with new faces.
“I don’t care what face is up there provided the change comes out
very well. By the way, new faces do not necessarily bring change. You
can bring new faces who will be happy to repeat what has been happening.
So, in this matter, it is good if Nigerians remain better focussed on
practical assessment of the reality.
“Is Nigeria getting better? Are we making progress? Does that tell
the integrity of our behaviour? Are the services running well and
better? I don’t care who the ministers are, provided the improvement is
seen. If you ask me whether the improvement has come, the President has
already begged us to be patient with him. So we are waiting and we are
watching.”
Onaiyekan added that the emergence of the SDGs was premised on the need to get another global agenda.
He
recalled that at the just concluded 70th United Nations General
Assembly, the 2030 SDGs agenda were adopted, adding that the vision 2030
agenda, as well as the vision of African agenda 2063, could not be
achieved solely by the government.
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