Delegates
to the ongoing National Conference on Tuesday overwhelmingly voted that
religious bodies in the country should pay tax to the government.
If
the recommendation is passed into law by the National Assembly, it
means that churches and mosques in the country will begin to pay tax to
the coffers of the government.
The decision to make religious
bodies pay taxes came up when a delegate representing civil
organisations, Mallam Naseer Kura, during his contribution on the report
of the Committee on Religion, said that religious leaders were making
much money and should be taxed.
Kura complained
that pastors were making too much money at the expense of the people
and that many of them owned private jets and universities.
He said with the amount of money that the religious leaders made, they should be made to pay tax to the government.
Also
in his contribution, a delegate representing the Nigeria Guild of
Editors, Mr. Isaac Ighure, frowned at the situation where he said
pastors and heads of churches made too much money not to pay tax.
He
stressed that religious bodies should be made to pay taxes and that the
elite must stop abusing the poor in the society, saying “some people
buy private jets when people in their churches are suffering and living
in abject poverty, they should be made to pay taxes.”
When the
matter was put to vote, the delegates in unison voted ‘yes’ in support
of the motion that religious bodies should pay taxes.
The
conference also passed the recommendation that government should
discontinue the sponsorship of official government delegations on any
pilgrimage.
Not only that, it said that government at all
levels, should not utilise public funds to sponsor religious pilgrimages
for any category of citizens and government functionaries.
The
delegates however rejected the amendments made by some delegates that
Fridays should be made a work-free day in the country.
They also
voted against another amendments that would make religious bodies and
organisations not to be at major highways and areas populated by
residential buildings.
The delegates also voted that people who
changed religion in the country should not be molested and that they
should not be persecuted by their communities and families.
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