Pope Francis, Leader of the Roman Catholic Church, worldwide has appointed Nigerian Bishop Matthew Kukah as a member of the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Promotion of Human Integral Development.
Mr. Kukah, the Catholic Archbishop of Sokoto in the northwest of Nigeria, would join his global counterparts in the Dicastery to advise and promote the Pope’s concerns on issues pertaining to justice and peace, human rights, torture, human trafficking, amongst other development issues, a letter from the Vatican’s top brass, dated January 11 said.
Spokesman of the Sokoto Diocese, Christopher Omotosho, a reverend father, said in a statement Monday that Mr. Kukah’s latest appointment, which is “renewable for an initial period of five years,” adds to his “string of national and international engagements within the universal Church.”
The fiery archbishop has been critical of Nigerian government’s handling of critical national issues.
Last December, Bishop Kukah – a firm critic of the Buhari administration, chided the Nigerian leader for his widely perceived institutionalisation of northern hegemony at the expense of national unity in the country.
Mr. Kukah’s Christmas homily did not sit well with a local Muslim group, which urged him to apologise for his “malicious comments” against Islam, or quietly and quickly leave Sokoto.
Presidential spokesman Garba Shehu, however, discountenanced the ultimatum, noting that the cleric had the right to air his opinion albeit ‘insensitive.’
It is a verifiable fact that the Honorable. Minister for Science and Technology, Chief. Engr.…
Two months after inferno ravaged the popularly GSM village in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital,…
A police operative attached to Otuocha Area Command, Anambra East Local Government Area of…
Many residents of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, say they are finding it difficult to…
Following an investigative hearing on the $2 billion renewable energy grants and investments in Nigeria,…
Justice Obiora Egwuatu of the Federal High Court in Abuja has granted bail of N10…
This website uses cookies.