The
Presidency on Monday said contrary to claims by some individuals and groups,
President Muhammadu Buhari had treated all Nigerians without bias for ethnicity
or religion in his appointments and policies since he assumed office on May 29,
2015.
It
said claims that the present administration was targeting Christians and
members of the opposition were without foundation.
The
Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu,
said this in a statement while reacting to The
London Telegraph’s article “Children Face Death by Starvation in
Northern Nigeria” published on Saturday.
Shehu
said the article repeated a claim from an earlier piece “Nigeria Using UK Aid
to Persecute President’s Political Foes” published on April 12, indicating that
Nigeria was diverting United Kingdom’s aid monies away from fighting the
Islamist terror group Boko Haram towards those the newspaper identified as
political opponents of the administration.
Shehu
said the statement was incorrect and unhelpful.
The
presidential spokesman said to suggest that Buhari’s government was deepening
Muslim-Christian division was not only untrue, but played into the hands of the
Boko Haram sect who wished to divide Nigerians along religious lines.
He
said, “As for claims that the administration is targeting Christians and the
opposition, these are without foundation. Since assuming office, President
Buhari has treated all Nigerians without bias for ethnicity or religion, as the
composition of his cabinet and the policies and programmes of his
administration demonstrate.
“To
suggest his government as deepening Muslim-Christian division is not only
untrue, but plays into the hands of Boko Haram who wish to divide Nigerians
along religious lines.
“Fighting
this group is key priority of President Buhari’s administration. Indeed the
international community has widely acknowledged his determination to defeat
terrorism in Nigeria and the entire Lake Chad Basin.
“There
is nothing to gain by attempting to mould public opinion against these facts.
Therefore we invite The
Telegraph to visit Nigeria: to witness first-hand not only the
challenges we face, but the administration’s determination to confront them.”
Shehu
noted that while the claims in both articles were attributed to an unnamed
source in the United States and “Western officials,” the first article
drew the condemnation of the US Embassy in Abuja as having drawn conclusions
directly opposite to the position of the US government when it was first
published.
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Politics