Government Requests Special Prayers From Muslim To Tackle Insecurity

Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Dr. Wasiu Olatunbosun in the group photograph with league of Alfas

Oyo State government has tasked Muslims to offer special prayers for the state to overcome its present security challenges

Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Dr. Wasiu Olatunbosun gave this charge, on Thursday, during a Community and Public Enlightenment programme on security and peaceful coexistence, held at State Secretariat, Ibadan.

He noted that state government sought the prayers of leaders and adherents of all religions to give spiritual backing to the efforts of the Governor Seyi Makinde administration targeted at tackling present insecurity in the state.

He argued that the Makinde administration had spent hugely on logistics and welfare of personnel of security agencies but the results had not been commensurate.

Olatunbosun, especially, urged the Islamic clerics to pray to God to expose saboteurs of the state government’s efforts.

Noting that a peaceful state was in the interest of all, he demanded prayers, day and night, to ensure that Oyo state and the Governor Seyi Makinde administration does not fail.

He decried politicization of the current state of insecurity in the state, noting that the state, at the outset of the immediate past administration, between 2011 and 2012, witnessed similar state of insecurity as the present time, until the tide turned for the better.

In his remarks at the event, Oyo State Coordinator of National Council of Muslim Youth Organisations (NACOMYO), Mr. Daud Afolabi said it was a must for Muslims to pray for peace and order in the state.

He questioned how many Muslims say a prayer for Oyo state in their daily prayers, urging them not to downplay the role of prayers in resolving present insecurity in the state.

In playing their roles to assist government, Afolabi charged Islamic clerics to take their preaching right to the barracks of thugs and area boys.

Arguing that Muslims boasted of the highest population in the state, Afolabi also urged Muslim parents to give the right training to their children/wards so that they do not constitute nuisance to the society.

He however charged the Makinde government to heed to security advice and put in more efforts to tackle insecurity in the state.

Another Islamic leader, Abdulrahman Taiwo urged the state government to mandate that celebration of Egungun festival should be restricted to frontage of their respective family houses.

On his own part, Alhaji Abdulahi Adekola urged the state government to look at the menace of drug abuse with the high number of alcohol and Indian hemp smoking joints littered across the state.

He noted that, many a time, people perpetrate crime after abusing drugs and other similar substances.

Pointing to the immediate past administration of Senator Abiola Ajimobi, another Islamic cleric, Alhaji Kazeem Abdulazeez demanded a firmer handling of thugs and anyone prone to commit crime and criminality.

Also speaking, Alhaji Mohammadu Saheed called for empowerment of thugs and provision of job opportunities to take unemployed persons off the streets.

Another Islamic leader, Alhaji Buniamin Salaudeen urged Makinde to direct Chairmen of local government areas to each engage at least 50 youths into local policing.

This is as he demanded that there should be a plan to rehabilitate and resettle thugs and youths, if they are to forsake acts of thuggery and criminality.

 

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