• European leaders back Nigeria’s peace efforts, call for unity
• Religious leaders demand end to violence in North, M’Belt
President Bola Tinubu, yesterday, in Lagos said Nigeria has secured French collaboration on military equipment and training following a phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron on Saturday.
Also, European leaders, including former Slovak Prime Minister Eduard Heger, Switzerland’s Marc Jost and Austria’s Gudrun Kugler-Lang, have pledged support for Nigeria’s initiatives to tackle violence in the North.

This is according to excerpts of the President’s address to the governors at the meeting made available to newsmen yesterday.
Tinubu revealed that Nigeria “is prepared” to leverage all its goodwill and existing lines of credit to acquire necessary equipment and training for security forces in the fight against terrorism.
He said, “I can report to you, yesterday again, at a lengthy discussion with Macron, their collaboration with us for equipment and support.
“I’m making frantic efforts to contact other nations. If we have to spend our goodwill and line of credit, we have those who are willing to support us with equipment and training.”
The President described insecurity as the next major challenge confronting his administration, emphasising the need for collective effort to achieve victory.
“The next phase of our struggle is staring us in the face; it is the challenge of insecurity in this country. I’m making all the efforts to ensure it is we, collectively, that will share the joy and be proud of victory over tyranny,” Tinubu said.
THE European leaders, meeting under the First Step Forum, an international platform promoting religious freedom and peaceful coexistence, gathered with Muslim and Christian religious leaders in Abuja over the weekend.
The interfaith meeting, held under the Abuja Declaration for Sustainable Peace and Religious Harmony, produced a four-point communiqué focusing on curbing violence in the Middle Belt and northern states.
The communiqué called for an end to impunity, protection of civilians and strengthened international support for stability efforts.
Heger drew parallels with Slovakia’s journey to freedom, highlighting Nigeria’s potential and traditional values to mobilise the youth for a brighter future.
“My country, Slovakia, of five and a half million, went through tough decades to become part of the free world, but Nigeria has great traditional and religious values that role models can leverage to mobilise the younger generation,” Heger said.
Two-term President of the National Assembly’s Christian Legislators’ Forum, Teejay Yusuf, identified the erosion of traditional and religious values as a key contributor to Nigeria’s challenges, urging leaders to take proactive measures.
The forum also emphasised the importance of early warning systems, mediation and dialogue to de-escalate tensions, foster forgiveness and promote restorative justice.
Notable attendees included the Emir of Bungudu, Zamfara State, and representatives from major Christian and Muslim organisations.
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