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Home BUSINESS FIRS apologizes to CAN, says offensive Easter flier misconstrued

FIRS apologizes to CAN, says offensive Easter flier misconstrued

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FIRS also said its intention was not to denigrate the message of Easter but to engage taxpayers to perform their civic duty

By Kehinde Okeowo,

The Federal Inland Revenue (FIRS) Service has tendered an apology to the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) after the religious body frowned at an Easter message it shared on its social media handle.

FIRS on Sunday posted a flier via its X page saying, “Jesus paid your debts, not your taxes.” but CAN deemed it offensive.

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This post also elicited reactions from Nigerians who took to the comment section of the trending flier to condemn the action.

Reacting to the now-viral post, CAN, demanded a public apology, saying the message disrespected the Christian faith.

However, responding to CAN’s statement on Tuesday, Dare Adekambi, Special Adviser on Media to the FIRS Chairman, Zacch Adedeji said the organization’s intention was not to denigrate the message of Easter but to engage taxpayers and remind them of their civic duty.

Adekambi went on to say the agency had no religion and had no intention to offend adherents of the Christian faith.

ALSO READ: CAN seeks DSS intervention over provocative FIRS Easter advert   

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The statement read, “Our attention has been drawn to a statement by the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) about a flier posted on our social media platforms with the headline ‘Jesus paid your debts, not your taxes.’

“As a responsible government agency, we would like to say we did not put out the flier purposely to denigrate Jesus Christ or detract from the huge sacrifice He made for humanity. We are acutely aware that the essence of the Easter period is to celebrate this huge sacrifice.

“The message was our way of uniquely engaging taxpayers, to remind them of the need to prioritize payment of their taxes as a civic obligation.

“Yes, we would say the message ruffled feathers in some circles. The unintended meaning/insinuation being read into the post was not what we were out to communicate as an agency.

“Good a thing, this much is acknowledged by CAN in its statement wherein it said, ‘We recognize that the intended message may have been to creatively engage taxpayers…’ We wish to offer our unreserved apologies for this misinterpretation.

“FIRS, as a responsible agency, has no religion and will not bring down any religion or offend the sensibilities of adherents of various faiths in the country.

“Our goal is to assess, collect, and account for revenue for the wellbeing of the Federation. It is an investment in the country’s progress when citizens pay taxes. Once again, we wish to apologize to CAN and Christians who felt offended by the unintended consequence of our message on Easter Sunday”.

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