We are not elected to make excuses, says Lai Mohammed
Minister
of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed has assured Nigerians
that the present administration was determined to turn around the
economic situation for good.
Mohammed noted that the administration was aware that it was not
elected to make excuses but to put the nation back on a sound economic
footing, ensure the security of lives and property and banish
corruption.
He therefore assured Nigerians that the change promised was real, despite the current tough situation.
Speaking at a meeting with members of Broadcasting Organizations of
Nigeria (BON) in Abuja alongside four other ministers, the minister
reassured Nigerians that the present administration was not lacking in
political will, commitment, discipline and prudence.
Other ministers in attendance are: Dr. Chris Ngige, Labour and
Employment; Babatunde Fashiola, Power, Housing and Work; FCT, Musa
Bello and Trade and Investment, Okey Enelamah.
Information and Culture minister also noted that for keen followers
of the activities of government in the past one year will admit that the
administration has made great strides towards fulfilling its campaign
promises.
He said, “As I have said at many fora, our economy, or whatever is
left of it after years of serial mismanagement and massive corruption,
is in a bad state.
“Throw into the mix the huge fall in oil price, and you have nothing
but a disaster of an economy. But then, this Administration is aware
that it was not elected to make excuses but to put the nation back on a
sound economic footing, ensure the security of lives and property and
banish corruption.
“We have therefore decided to turn the disaster that we inherited
into a blessing by diversifying our economy away from the mono-product
of oil, leveraging on agriculture, solid minerals as well as culture and
tourism, among others.
“Let me assure Nigerians that the change we promised is real, despite
the tough situation we are in at the moment. It is real because there
is no shortage of political will, commitment, discipline and prudence on
the part of government, under the dedicated and visionary leadership of
President Buhari.
“Now, make no mistake about it: The road will be rough. But as the
saying goes, the darker the night, the brighter the morning. Our long
suffering people will surely smile again. Change is no instant coffee.
It is a process. We are now laying a solid foundation for our country.
“By earmarking 30 per cent of our budget to capital expenditure, we
are building and rebuilding infrastructure. Through our massive social
intervention this year alone, we are catering for the weak among us
through the conditional transfer of 5,000 Naira to the vulnerable, we
are creating jobs as we move to employ 500,000 graduates and 100,000
non-graduates, we are offering soft loans to market women, men and
traders, we are ready to feed 5.5 million school children once daily,
and we are providing scholarships to 100,000 students studying Science
Technology, Engineering and Mathematics.
“In total, over 8 million Nigerians will benefit directly, and millions more indirectly, from our social intervention fund.
“Nigeria will overcome the economic catastrophe caused by years of
bad governance, mind-boggling corruption and unprecedented profligacy.
But we must not despair. We must keep hope alive.
“The Buhari Administration has also squarely taken on the fight
against corruption and it is winning. Today, the issue of corruption has
become topical in national discourse and the corrupt are no longer able
to flaunt their ill-gotten wealth with impunity, as they used to do.
This is because the government has succeeded in sensitizing Nigerians to
the cost of corruption to their lives.
“For example, it was corruption that prolonged the war against Boko
Haram and dispatched many soldiers and civilians to their early graves;
It was corruption that ensured that while oil was selling for over 100
dollars per barrel, the country had nothing to show for the windfall; it
was because of corruption that even though the national budget has
increased from less than a trillion in 1999 to over 6 trillion in 2016,
poverty has grown almost at the same rate that the budget has increased;
It was corruption that gave Nigerians darkness, instead of light, while
successive governments pumped millions of dollars into the power
sector.
“Nigeria’s economy poses a great challenge! Nigeria has lost a huge
chunk of its earnings to the massive crash in the price of oil.
“But the Administration has decided to see opportunities rather than
difficulties by working assiduously to diversify the nation’s economy
away from oil.”
Commending Nigerians for their support, understanding and
perseverance in the past year, the minister agreed that the country was
passing through a very difficult situation at this time, with the loss
of over 60 per cent of national income due to the drop in the price of
crude oil.
On his response to the question of the economic status of the
country, he said: “Many have asked me if indeed Nigeria is broke. In
answering them, I have shunned semantics. I have simply asked them: If a
man earning 100,000 Naira a month suddenly sees his salary plummet to
40,000 Naira, what is that called?” he asked.
Also speaking, Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige,
insisted that the organized labour was duly carried along during the
entire consultative meetings held before the recent hike in price of
fuel.
This he explained was why oil workers and the Trade Union Congress
(TUC) backed out of the strike called against the deregulation.
Nigige also disclosed that it was the idea of labour that for
deregulation to work, the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)
must also sell its own petrol at same price as independent marketers,
otherwise the issue of diversion and smuggling of the NNPC’s product
will continue.
“That’s why TUC backed out because they know this was held and ok and everybody was on board,” he said.
Ngige lamented that the country which produced oil at OPEC production
level of about 2.2 million barrel per day currently produces 1.4
million litres per day, losing about 800, 000 a day.
The minister also raised an alarm that “We are under-producing and our revenue has been going down.”
He further disclosed that his intervention saved what could have
been resulted in massive lost of job in the oil sector as most oil firms
shelved the plans to massively reduce their workforce.
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