The General Overseer of the Citadel Global Community Church, Pastor Tunde Bakare, has announced the inauguration of the ‘Nigeria for Nigerians’, also known as the ‘N4N Movement’, learnt.
He announced this during his Sunday worship Service, a his State of the Nation address titled: ‘The black box of Nigeria’s politics’, in Oregun, Lagos.
He said that the address may however, be the last he will deliver in the Church.
His words: “This State of the Nation broadcast may be the last I will deliver in this auditorium.”
Speaking further, he said that the new Movement will be christened the ‘New Nigeria Progressive Movement’, which will “fight to entrench true Federalism in the country”.
He added: “Even among those touting restructuring in their political agenda today, there is no visible concerted effort in the direction of long-term commitment to fundamental reconceptualisation and renegotiation of the Nigeria State.
“Thus, once the furore of election turns, whims and movement predictably loses momentum, Nigerians once again will be faced with the daily realities of a nation that is restructured to fail.
“Fellow Nigerians, I am here to announce to you that the time has come for the true progressives to arise, say enough is enough to political hypnosis; it is time to take our country back.
“We are stepping in to shape the national conversation beyond elections, and begin to lay the groundwork for the restructuring of this nation.
“We will be going to every nook and cranny with our agenda and message. We have only three points on our agenda, restructuring, restructuring, and restructuring.
“Therefore, our Distinct Nationhood Agenda, DNA, is simple, it is RUN, Restructuring For United Nigeria, this is what I am set to advance.
“I am running and leading a movement called the New Nigeria Progressives Movement. We shall join forces with foreign countries, champion reintegration of diverse ethnic groups into true identity until every Nigeria is proud to say ‘I am a Nigerian’, and also spearhead the orientation of every Nigerian until a minimum of 50 million Nigerians can say ‘no’ to hypnotic democracy.”