Overseer of the Citadel Global Community Church, Tunde Bakare has stated that Nigeria’s coming generations must not be burdened with insurgency, huge debt and lack of basic amenities.
This was stated by Tunde Bakare during a Democracy Day dialogue organised by the Canada chapter of PTB4Nigeria.
Bakare noted that the next generations of Nigerians must not bear the brunt of the mess created by those before them.
The cleric noted that coming generations must not inherit “generator-powered economy, pothole-infested road network and comatose refineries”, adding that there should be a generation that will witness the “new Nigeria”.
“Let me reiterate that it is our responsibility as present-day nation builders to ensure national reconciliation, national reconstitution and national reconstruction to provide an enabling environment for the growth and optimisation of future generations of Nigerians,” Bakare said.
“It is our responsibility, and we must not leave it to the coming generations. As Franklin D. Roosevelt also said, There is a mysterious cycle in human events. To some generations much is given. Of other generations much is expected.
“I perceive this emerging generation of Nigerians has “a rendezvous with destiny.
“Consequently, the emerging and coming generations of Nigerians, including the generation of my grandson, Rereoluwade, must not bear the brunt of the mess that we and those before us have created.
“Their generation must not be burdened with tackling Boko Haram, insurgency in the south-east, banditry, kidnapping, or the farmer-herder crisis.
“Their generation should not have to exclaim “Up NEPA!” nor should they be handed a generator-powered economy or a pothole-infested road network.
“Their generation should not be burdened about comatose refineries, nor should they be bequeathed a growing debt burden that could render Nigerians slaves on their soil.
“Their generation should not have to march on the streets against police brutality or the inability of the government to prevent or resolve the abductions of hundreds of schoolboys and girls.
“Their generation must not be burdened with a failed education system, nor should tens of millions of their peers be left out of school without access to education.
“Their generation should not be confronted with incessant strikes that turn four-year university courses into eight years of torture in dilapidated facilities, under poorly paid teachers and sex-for-grades merchants masquerading as lecturers.
“Theirs should not be a generation incapacitated with an inability to match the rising population with corresponding growth in job creation.
“Rather than these bleak prospects, theirs should be the generation that inherits the New Nigeria, a nation that runs on the dreams of patriotic fathers and the ideas and visions of a young generation of the most brilliant minds on the planet.”