The alleged Islamisation of Nigeria under the current administration is totally false – Presidency
- Minister of Information and culture, Lai Muhammed, has denied the rumour that the President intends to Islamise the nation
-
The minister said allegations of plans to Islamise the country is being
peddled by people who aim to tarnish the image of the president
- He appealed to the media to desist from providing a platform for exponents of incendiary statements that can divide the nation
Minister
of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, has condemned the statements
by some religious leaders alleging that President Muhammadu Buhari-led
administration is planning to Islamise Nigeria.
In
a statement by the minister’s special assistant on media and publicity,
Segun Adeyemi, Mr. Mohammed said the allegations are being peddled to
tarnish the President’s image.

The alleged Islamisation of Nigeria under the current administration is totally false – Presidency
According to Premium Times, Muhammed who spoke at a town hall meeting in Ilorin, Kwara state said: “The
alleged Islamisation of Nigeria under the current administration is
totally false and should be perceived in its entirety as a campaign of
calumny,” the statement said.
“There is
no bigger threat to the peace and unity of our country today than
religion-coated incendiary messages, which are being carelessly sent out
by some religious, political and opinion leaders.
“In recent times, the media has been
increasingly awash with incendiary statements that seem designed to
pitch the adherents of the two prominent religions in the country,
Christians and Muslims against one another. Such fallacies like the
Islamisation of Nigeria, the killing of Christians by Muslims, the labelling of Nigeria as the most dangerous place for Christians in the world can only serve one purpose: trigger a religious war.
“Needless
to say that no nation ever survives a religious war. Those who are
making these allegations know that they are not true, but they have
found in religion another tool to demonize the government of the day,
divert attention from the government’s anti-corruption stance and create
undue tension in the polity.
“Make no
mistake about it, there have been conflicts between adherents of the two
major religions in certain parts of the country. To now extrapolate
from that to say Nigeria is the most dangerous place for Christians in
the world is a disservice to Nigeria and an overkill. What those who are
pushing this negative narrative about Nigeria do not know is that if
they succeed in giving Nigeria a bad name in the comity of nations, they
too will not escape the consequences that will result therefrom."
He
alleged that religious leaders making the “incendiary statements” were
being used by political groups to undermine government.
“The secular nature of Nigeria’s Constitution
makes the issue of religious dominance and impunity improbable. It is
also important to note that the underlying principle of religious
conflict may not be purely religious, but more often than not coloured
with political connotations as vividly depicted in the case of the
terrorist group, Boko Haram.
“And more
often than not, conflicts between Muslims and Christians are fuelled by
political motivations, ethnic differences, extremism, intolerance and
terrorism.
“Let me appeal to the media
to desist from providing a platform for exponents of incendiary
statements, those who will latch on to religion and ethnicity to divide
us, and those who have no qualms about leveraging their privileged
positions to give Nigeria a bad name in the international community.”
Meanwhile, the presidency in the last week of December 2016 announced that the federal government will deepen its partnership with the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) to fund critical projects in health, water and the infrastructure sector.
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