“We are a poor nation. They say firewood is not for fetch. They say we need to plant more trees and they are not giving us money.
“We need to tell the West, if you don’t guarantee our finances and work with us to stop this, we are not going to comply with your climate change”, Tinubu said.
This development has continued to spark reactions as many Nigerians have continued to drag the former Lagos governor on social media enjoining him to retract his comment on Holy Communion and apologize to Nigerian Christians.
Joining the fray, PDP, in a statement issued by the spokesperson of the party’s Presidential Campaign Management Committee, Dino Melaye, stated that Tinubu’s statement is an insult to Christianity.
According to Dino, Tinubu after ignoring the Christian faith and fielding Muslim-Muslim ticket, the APC presidential candidate has also “rubbed insult on injury by calling in the Holy Communion into an unrelated conversation”.
He said: “The APC presidential candidate, Ahmed Bola Tinubu, plunged into new depths of desecration when by an unguarded and unrelated flow of thought he despised the body of Christ by profaning the sacrament of communion and besmirched the church.
“Having overlooked Christians in his choice of a running mate, he further rubbed insult on injury by calling in the Holy Communion into an unrelated conversation”.
“It would have been honourable for Tinubu to simply admit that he didn’t know what climate change is. Again, that exposed his limited understanding and poor preparation for governance.
“Any leader of any great nation who does not understand the basics of climate change, especially with the ongoing flooding in Nigeria and the economic conflict arising from farmers and herders, has no business aspiring to lead our dear country at this moment.
“Besides, Nigerians who have been in doubt about the presence of mind and the physiological capacity of Tinubu to preside over the affairs of Nigeria should now be convinced that he is not fit.
“For a moment, his thought processes tripped and he launched into another issue entirely. Nigerians could imagine if what happened in Kaduna had happened on the world stage. As I said earlier, Nigerians cannot afford to gamble with the next election.
“An Atiku presidency will not only be at home with global issues anywhere and anytime. He would build bridges and partnerships to address contemporary and emerging issues with pace, purpose and patience.
“He will collaborate with others to contain the causes and effects of climate change and more importantly, he will work for structures that will help Nigeria to build the resilience and adaptation to climate change, particularly in climate smart agriculture and other strategic initiatives.”