The Lead Pastor of the Citadel Global Community Church, Tunde Bakare, has criticised Nigerian lawmakers for ignoring worsening insecurity in the country.
The cleric spoke on Sunday during his State of the Nation Address in Lagos.
Bakare condemned the National Assembly for its lack of initiative during the crisis.
“It is a shame on our National Assembly that it took the United States Congress, not the representatives elected by Nigerians, to convene a hearing on the lived experiences of citizens suffering under insecurity.
“While those in Abuja were busy with politicking, post-turning for political relevance, defecting from one political party to another, in their desperate manoeuvres to secure their seats ahead of the 2027 elections,” he said.
He noted that President Donald Trump had used “the most despicable language ever used by a world leader” to describe Nigeria, which referred to Nigeria as a “now-disgraced country.”
Bakare said the government’s sudden “flurry of activity after Trump’s remarks” exposed its earlier indifference.
The cleric accused Nigerian leaders of “burying their heads in the sand like ostriches” while remaining “preoccupied with the politics of chaos” instead of governance.
He said the political class had ignored citizens’ daily suffering and paid “little attention to the real work of governance,” adding that it was “a stain on the Nigerian government” that external pressure was required before officials took action.
The pastor said Nigeria had suffered its “most humiliating international public image since the Abacha era”, blaming this on years of failed leadership and the refusal to confront deep national crises.
Lamenting the rise in terrorist attacks and kidnappings, he said, “Terrorists and bandits now dare the Nigerian state with impunity.”


