 As part of efforts to mitigate post-election violence, crises, and ensure peaceful transition of government leadership, stakeholders have called on religious leaders to educate their followers. At a one-day peace stakeholders conference, we've themed the role of faith leaders in dowsing post-election tension. The country director of Global Peace Foundation Nigeria C.GPFN Reverend Joseph Hayab said it was important that those who grieved over the outcome of the election seek redress in court. Plus, TV News correspondent Habila Derofai filed in this report. Over the years, Cardinal State has had its fair share of violence leading to loss of lives and properties of citizens. It is against this backdrop that stakeholders gathered to speak against further violence emanating from the results of the elections. Religious leaders are told to take prompt action against negative statements able to incite chaos. Nobody stops the inauguration of any government or any election that has been announced by INEG, according to our laws. So we are simply saying that religious leaders must not make statements that would cost tension. What we simply want is those who have gone to court should pursue their issues in court and if the court rules favorably good, those who have been announced as winners at the moment should also be allowed to be inaugurated so that we continue. This country must move on, who will respect the rules, who will also promote peace. I'm calling on the government to ensure that any person in this country who uses religion for campaigning, such a person should be brought to book. We should bear in mind always that we don't have any other country than Nigeria. Therefore, we should do all that we can to ensure that the country is safe, the country is united, and the country is peaceful. They fight, but they fight academically. That's right. So, but we here, we carry this sword and kill ourselves and if someone would say, where are their children, when we kill ourselves? So what I'm talking about, the migration committee here, we have a lot of things to do, is not to instigate people to kill themselves, but what we're still doing is that, how can we live in peace? Other religious leaders load the efforts at sensitizing Nigerians at a time when the country is grappling with ethnic and religious tensions, heightened before the elections. The peaceful coexistence of Nigeria should be our collective project. It should be our collective project because all of us are critical stakeholders in this nation building. Your efforts will take Nigeria to where it should be, but where sentiments and negativity is allowed to come to play, it certainly affects all of us. The consensus is to continue to raise their voices against this unity and incisive statements as the country transits into another government.