UK-based pastor, Tobi Adegboyega, has said that the societal ills the British Conservative Party leader, Kemi Badenoch, mentioned experiencing in Nigeria are not peculiar to the West African country and can also be experienced in the UK.
Recall that Adegboyega’s Church, SPAC Nation, was recently shut down by the British Government over allegations of mismanaging £1.87m funds.
Meanwhile, Badenoch has been speaking about Nigeria in unflattering terms, including accusing the police of robbing those they swore to protect.
A British journalist asked Badenoch if she trusted the UK police.
She responded: “I do. My experience with the Nigeria Police was very negative. Coming to the UK, my experience with the British Police was very positive.
“The police in Nigeria will rob us (laughter). When people say I have this bad experience with the police because I’m black, I say well, I remember the police stole my brother’s shoe and his watch.”
Interviewer exclaimed in shock: “They took his shoe and his watch?”
Kemi continued: “It’s a very poor country. People do all sorts of things.
“So, giving people a gun is just a licence to intimidate. But that’s not just the problem. That is not the bar we should use for the British Police.
“When I was burgled, for example, the police were there. They were helpful before they eventually caught the person. This was in 2004, that was 20 years ago.”
However, speaking on Monday’s edition of Channels TV’s ‘Politics Today’, Pastor Adegboyega pointed out that such ills were not peculiar to Nigeria.
He said: “I completely disagree with that statement. Between 2023 and 2024, about 78,000 bags and phones were snatched in the UK alone.
“There’s a very strong Nigerian black community in this nation.
“For people like the leader of the opposition (party) you just mentioned to get to that position, they’ve been fighting on the street.
“There were funerals where kids were killed in the UK. They buried three kids from the same parents.
“And we ask the question when the Nigerian community control these things in the UK, where are these voices? They have been fighting.
“The Windrush, which has to do with Jamaicans; people have been fighting before a black person or black immigrant can ascend to those seats.
“So we cannot disassociate from where we are coming from.
“We are not denying the fact that our country has issues and we are also not as old as the advanced economies like Britain. But we cannot say things are all dark because it’s not true,” Adegboyega countered Badenoch.
“We live on the street and know what is going on here. We know that prisons and mostly mental hospitals have more young black people than schools in the UK.
“When SPAC Nation began, we started sending people to Harvard, Cambridge and also have the highest number in Imperial College,” he added.
Watch him speak in the video below..