Agency Report/

 

The Saints Simon and Jude Seminary, at Kuje, Abuja, witnessed a teary event today, when the late Rev. Fr. Michael Akawu, who was shot dead by armed robbers in Gwagwalada, was laid to rest.

The Catholic Bishop of Abuja, Most Revd. John Cardinal Onayeikan, many Catholic priests, family members, relatives and other faithful, could not hold back their tears as Akawu, the first indigenous priest was buried.

Akawu, middle, during his ordination by Onaiyekan in Abuja

The priest who was just 18 months in the priesthood, was until his death the Assistant Parish Priest at Our Lady of Immaculate Conception Parish Dobi.

On Thursday, late Akawu’s body left University Teaching Hospital Gwagwalada for Immaculate Conception Parish Dobi for a Mass, from where it departed to Our Lady Queen of Nigeria Pro-Cathedral Garki for three different masses of the Wake.

On Friday, August 24, the Funeral Mass was also held at OLQN Pro- Cathedral from where it proceeded to the Priests Burial Ground at the Ss Simon and Jude Minor Seminary Kuje for internment.

Akawu's body during the funeral mass

The Parish Priest at Dobi, Rev. Fr. Paul Oziabor Salami, told our correspondent who is a personal friend, that the death of the young priest has left the whole parish devastated.

Salami who was visibly broken said that the death of his colleague and friend cut so deeply as he prayed to God to bring the perpetrators of the dastardly act to book.

Rev. Fr Michael Akawu was Saturday evening shot dead by yet to be identified gunmen in Gwagwalada, Abuja.

He was allegedly gunned down at a Supermarket in Gwagwalada where he was said to have gone shopping.

Earlier in the week, while reacting to the death of Akawu, Director of Social Communication in the Archdiocese, Fr. Patrick Alumuku, described his demise as a blow below the belt to the growth of the local church in Abuja.

“It is a very sad moment for us because Fr. Akawu was a sign of the growing local church in the FCT. He was the first indigenous priest of the local tribe here in the nation’s capital,” he said.

He ruled out the possibility of a targeted attack on the slain priest, saying: “The church was made to understand that Fr. Akawu was not the only individual that was killed by the gunmen.”

*NAN

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