If Not For Our Prayers To God And His Intervention, $1 Would Be N10,000 — Pastor Adeboye

Clement Olafusi

The general overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Enoch Adeboye has said that Nigeria’s forex rate would have spiralled out of control if not for divine intervention.

Currently, the naira exchanges for N1,730 to a dollar.

Speaking at the Special Holy Ghost Congress in Abuja, Adeboye said his prayers, alongside those of “his people”, mitigated a free fall of the naira.

He connected the currency’s depreciation to Nigeria’s over-reliance on fuel imports despite being an oil producing nation.

The cleric also criticized monies spent on “non-functional refineries”, labelling them as a strain on federal coffers and a drain on the economy.

“When you quote me, quote me accurately. We need help — divine help — not human help. If we want restoration, we must first admit something is missing,” Adeboye said.

“Before our president came in, everybody knew that the reason we were having financial problems is the fact that a lot of money was being spent to import petrol.

“How can we be importing petrol when we have this resource in abundance here?

“We spent billions of naira on our refineries, and yet they didn’t work. So, we had to keep on importing fuel,” he added.

The revered pastor added that the removal of subsidies at first inspired hope but incited backlash from those profiting from the status quo.

The preacher then alleged that the cabal struck back by creating instability — a scenario that worsened the country’s economic woes and increased naira’s depreciation.

“They created problems, and suddenly, the naira began to decline rapidly,” Adeboye added.

“I called on my people to pray, and many joined in. Because the way the naira was declining, if God had not intervened, by now, $1 would be about N10,000.

“But God stepped in, showing us that we need prayers.”

Nigeria has been going through its worst economic crisis in decades since Tinubu aborted the petrol subsidy regime and floated the country’s currency in his first weeks on the president.

In the month of August, Nigerians hit the streets to protest against hunger and rising inflation.

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