...Gifts Libya Deportees N4m
Servant of God and President of the
Omega Fire Ministries worldwide (OFM), Apostle (Prof.) Johnson Suleman, was at
his latest humanitarian best on Sunday, 10th of December, 2017, as he dazzled with
the sum of four million Naira, 13 stranded Nigerians who recently escaped from
slavery in Libya.
Suleman who runs ‘Touch Of Love’, an independent gift-giving scheme that
seeks to provide material assistance to needy people across nations of the
world including emergency funds and in-kind gifts, had called out and blessed
the 14 Nigerians midway into the Sunday service.
Voicing his views on the sorry state
of leadership in Nigeria, which he believes regularly aids the exodus of
promising Nigerians into less blessed countries, the ‘Oracle of God’, as
Suleman is fondly addressed, counseled the nation’s leadership at all levels to
ensure that the nation’s systems work in order to convince the youths that they
have a future in their country.”
His words:
“I heard some people saying that they
didn’t know why Nigerians are running to Europe and America. See, if Nigeria is
good, nobody will leave. The only problem Nigeria has is that our system is not
working. If you go to Europe or America, it’s not as if there is no poverty
there; there is poverty, the only benefit is that they are the systems that
work. You are paying for light, it is working, you are paying for anything, it
is working. In Nigeria, you pay for everything, nothing works! So, how do you
expect people to stay where they feel they don’t have a future?”
“Check the list of ministers in our
government, there is no young person. How then do they focus on the youths when
they are all old? They are the same set that has always been in power. They are
recycling power. Also, we have a system now that say they are fighting
corruption, I say they are not fighting corruption; they are only recovering
stolen money. Corruption is the perversion of due process. It is corruption,
when you empower people from your own states at the detriment of other parts of
the country. Recovering money is not fighting corruption.”
“In as much as I do not support this
get-rich-quick syndrome, I will continue to say that we must make Nigeria work.
I overheard that even in the deportation camp there is some cartel being run by
Nigerians. Can you imagine that? Nigerians selling Nigerians into slavery! That
tells you that we are the problem of ourselves. If you go to American an
American will tell you that I’m from America, if you go to London, a Londoner
will tell you that I’m from London, if you go to India, an Indian will tell you
that I’m from India, but if you go to Nigeria, a Nigerian will tell you I’m
Ibo, I’m Yoruba, I’m Hausa! We are so tribal conscious. So, we are the problem
of ourselves. How can Nigerians be slaughtered in Libya and a Nigerian is the
head of the cartel! You are selling your brothers and sisters and you think you
are going to enjoy that money? We love strangers we don’t love ourselves.”
“Think of places like Shoprite and
others like it, if they were owned by Nigerians few Nigerians will patronize
them. But because they are owned by foreigners we all queue up to buy from
them. If DSTV was owned by a Nigerian , Nigerians won’t subscribe to it. You
will begin to hear something like, oh, he is not from my tribe; he is Ibo, I’m
Yoruba. We hire White coach to coach Nigerian footballers and we make his
conditions very favourable. When we hire a Nigerian coach, we don’t pay his
salary for months, thereby killing his morale yet we cry that we lose matches.
Speaking to the deportees, Apostle
Suleman urges them not to regret or cry they ever ventured outside Nigeria for
greener pastures but to put the experience behind them and rejoice that they
are back home alive. The shame, declares the servant of God, is on the government
that cannot take care of its own.
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