EL-RUFAI NOT ANTI- CHRISTIAN, DOESN'T CARE ABOUT OPINIONS-SON, BELLO. (PHOTO).
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El-Rufai not anti-Christian, doesn’t care about opinions – Son, Bello
A member, representing Kaduna North Federal Constituency at the House of Representatives, Bello El-Rufai, has dismissed claims that former Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai was anti-Christian.
Bello said the closest person to El-Rufai was a Christian from Cross Rivers State, Peter Jones.
He recalled that El-Rufai demolished both mosques and churches when he was the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT.
Speaking with Seun Okinbaloye in a podcast, Bello said: “My father is a very simple person who’s been stereotyped a lot. I got a video of him where people say this or that about him without even knowing him.
“My father does not go out of his way to change what people think about him. He doesn’t really care.
“There’s a perception that he’s anti-Christian. But, the closest person to him since we (children) were four years old was a man from Cross River State, Peter Jones.
“Religion is personal to us. As minister of the Federal Capital Territory, he demolished mosques. The imam said he hated Islam.
“He demolished churches and the Christians said he hated Christians. Maybe, it is the wrong imams and pastors who have issues, not him.”
I was disappointed when Senate rejected my father’s ministerial nomination – El-Rufai’s son
A member representing Kaduna North Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Bello El-Rufai, said he was disappointed when the Senate rejected his father, Nasir El-Rufai‘s appointment as minister.
Speaking with Seun Okinbaloye in a podcast, Bello said it took his pleas and those of other family members for his father to accept the ministerial nomination from President Bola Tinubu.
Bello, who doubles as the chairman of the House Committee on Banking Regulations, said he, the Governor of Kaduna state, Uba Sani, and one of his father’s commissioners, Hafiz Bayero, played a key role in convincing his father to work with this current government.
He said: “I was in the National Assembly when my father’s nomination was rejected. It was very disappointing and still is. Myself, the Governor of Kaduna State, Uba Sani, and one of my father’s commissioners, Mr Hafiz Bayero, played a key role in convincing my father to work with this current government.
“He (Nasir) didn’t want it. It’s hard for Nigerians to believe it because they feel it is everyone in Nigeria who wants to be a minister.
“To be fair to him, he didn’t want the job. We convinced him that, with the antecedents of Asiwaju, he would create an excellent team as he did in Lagos.
“The President wanted to work with him. It was clear when he came to Kaduna. We also had an idea of what his portfolio would be. It was meant to be power and gas. He insisted to the President in private that Nigeria would not sort its electricity issue if gas was not put under the other components of power.
“The irony is that nothing has been rougher than the lack of power in the last two weeks. I’m disappointed because Nigeria lost an effective administrator in my father, one who is willing to make difficult decisions to solve a problem.”
Bello, while dismissing claims that his father was anti-Christian, said many Nigerians do not know his father.
He said: “My father is a very simple person who’s been stereotyped a lot. I got a video of him where people say this or that about him without even knowing him.
“My father does not go out of his way to change what people think about him. He doesn’t really care.
“There’s a perception that he’s anti-Christian. But, the closest person to him since we (children) were four years old was a man from Cross River State, Peter Jones.
“Religion is personal to us. As minister of the Federal Capital Territory, he in mosques. The imam said he hated Islam. He demolished churches and the Christians said he hated Christians. Maybe, it is the wrong imams and pastors who have issues, not him.”
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