Non-Catholics hijacked protest: Mbaka begs Church leadership, Bishop Onaga, blames devil
Published
Nigerian priest, Ejike Mbaka has apologised to the Catholic church over his recent actions, even as he blamed the devil.
The Spiritual Director of Adoration Ministries in Enugu, in a sermon on Sunday, also begged Callistus Onaga, Bishop of Enugu to forgive him and his followers.
“There was a lot of mixed information. The devil entered the story; the church did not kidnap me”, he said.
The Reverend Father’s loyalists attacked Onaga’s home last week after speculations that Mbaka had disappeared/was arrested.
They walked from the Adoration ground in Emene, to the Bishop’s Court at Igboeze Street, Independence Layout, where they destroyed parts of the building.
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Daily Times
‘Fire and rehire’ policy by ‘some’ British employers irks employees
PM Boris Johnson calls ‘fire and rehire’ policy unacceptable; Labour, trade unions demand a ban on ‘cruel scheme’
May 9, 2021
LONDON: As coronavirus wreaks severe economic damage, some British employers stand accused of taking a highly controversial measure to stay afloat: fire and rehire.
The practice, which involves dismissing employees and re-engaging them on inferior terms, flared up in April, when British Gas dismissed almost 500 engineers after they refused to accept new contracts. Last year, British Airways staff battled with the national airline’s management over proposed fire-and-rehire schemes, while supermarket giant Asda faced a similar stand-off in 2019.