Pentecostals Pray for Nnamdi Kanu’s Release; Decries Insecurity in Nigeria

 Pentecostals Pray for Nnamdi Kanu’s Release; Decries Insecurity in Nigeria

FROM OUR RELIGIOUS NEWSDESK (AWKA)
Members of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN) Anambra State Chapter are scheduled to host a three-day prayer session in the three Senatorial Zones of the state.
The prayer retreat which is an annual event is to seek the face of God for divine intervention on the unconditional release of the detained POB leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.


The three-day prayer retreat will be held between the 10th, 11th and 12th day of May in Onitsha, Nnewi, and Awka.
Anambra State Chairman, Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria and International President, Maximum Impact Leadership Development Centre, Bishop Moses Ezedebego narrated in an interview at the weekend that the destruction of lives and property in Anambra State and the entire South East Region propelled the State PFN to mull such an event.


The group is also seeking divine wisdom from the state Governor, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, and the State Executive Council on the governance of Anambra State.


While pleading with the Federal Government to consider an unconditional release of the IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu if that would be enough step to restore normalcy and end activities of the unknown gunmen in the entire South East Region, Bishop Ezedebego solemnly said that despite the intervention of respectable people from Igboland to Aso Rock to release the IPOB leader and other religious leaders, he lamented that it was now time for God’s intervention on the matter.


Ezedebego who is the Presiding Bishop, of Rescue House Christian Assembly explained that people have not known peace in the South East since the incarceration of Kanu and maintained that releasing the detained Biafra agitator would go a long way in restoring peace to the region.


The prayer retreat according to the PFN boss would be supervised by the state executives in the three zones with a focus on peace in Anambra, South East, and Nigeria at large.