Buhari Replies Critics: I have Three Years More That will be result-oriented.
Critics carpeting President Muhammadu
Buhari for his perceived slow performance in his 10-month presidency got
a reply yesterday with the President responding that the criticisms
were too early and hasty since he has three more years to prove his
mettle.
“I know you are being harassed since the
election that they haven’t seen anything on the ground. Well, if you
have any explanation that could be accepted, it is that you have three
more years to go,” he said at the opening of the meeting of the National
Executive Committee of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Abuja.
Buhari, who briefed his party leaders on
the progress made so far by his administration, also seized the
opportunity provided by the occasion to respond to critics of his
frequent travels abroad, saying the trips were necessary to present the
nation’s case for foreign assistance.
According to Buhari, “Sometimes, you
need to present your case on a personal basis to your economic
colleagues and neighbours. Nothing is better than personal touch and I
believe that we are learning a lot and eventually, the nation will
realize so.”
He told his party leaders that his
administration appeared slow because it had used the last 10 months to
restructure the government, explaining that it had to prune the 42
ministries that the Peoples Democratic Party-led government left behind
to 24 for greater efficiency and to save cost.
Buhari further explained that he had to
conduct the restructuring along with the demands of producing a national
budget, saying that the task were enormous. But he assured that with
the 2016 budget in place, the coast was clear for him to fire from all
cylinders.
On the economy, Buhari blamed the
sliding price of crude oil which he said had continued to keep the
economy in bad shape, noting that about 27 states had been unable to pay
staff salaries regularly.
But he gave assurances that with a better and a more transparent management structure he was putting in place, better days were ahead.
But he gave assurances that with a better and a more transparent management structure he was putting in place, better days were ahead.
The President assured that with the
implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) policy, over
N3trillion had been mopped up by the federal government, adding that
details of monies recovered from indicted former government officials
and others facing corruption charges, would soon be made public.
He said public disclosure of the recoveries would demonstrate that his administration’s fight against corruption was not a fluke.
He said public disclosure of the recoveries would demonstrate that his administration’s fight against corruption was not a fluke.
Buhari said regardless of the present
challenges, nobody could contradict the fact that his administration’s
fight against corruption was critical to the development and overall
well- being of the people.
The President said, “We insist that we
have to know what comes in and what goes out for us to make a
comprehensive amendment to the economy. If you go and see the Central
Bank Governor, he will tell you that in the TSA, we have more than N3
trillion. Where would this money have been if TSA was not in vogue?”
He also spoke about corruption in the
petroleum sector of the economy and said the federal government will
soon begin the prosecution of all persons indicted by the reports of the
various investigative panels he had set up.
Buhari, however hinted of the frustration the administration was having in securing relevant evidence to prosecute corruption suspects, assuring his party leaders that the challenges notwithstanding, more work was being done to ensure that those indicted were duly and properly prosecuted.
According to him, “We have tried to make
sure that NNPC is reorganized, so that we know how much of our crude is
taken, how much it is sold and to which account the money is going. But
I tell you that up to the time we came, if anybody told you that he
knew how much of crude exchanged hands either on the high sea or
reaching their destination and the accounts the money went into, that
person would not be telling you the truth.
“We are getting the cooperation of
countries that have received this crude. But we have to be sure of the
facts in our hands before we start prosecution so that Nigerians will
believe what we have been telling them.”
In what seemed like a new policy
direction, the President hinted that the FG will have to prune down the
number of parastatals to conform with the cut in the number of
ministries which have been reduced from 42 to 24.
He said that an order rescinding the
sack of all boards has been given especially as it affects the
university boards, adding that the government realised that “according
to their laws, they cannot choose their Vice Chancellors unless the
boards are in place”.
On electoral violence, the President described the incidents recorded during the just concluded re-run election in Rivers State as very shameful.
“I am afraid I did not succeed in the
election in Kogi, Bayelsa and Rivers. I think that more Nigerians are
killed or killed themselves in Rivers than in any particular state. At
this stage of our political development, to remain brutal is shameful
and as a government, I promise we will do something by the next general
election,” he said.
In his opening speech, the national Chairman of APC, Chief John Oyegun
said notwithstanding some notable progress made by the APC
administration, there is need for the leaders to have some introspection
and reflections on the best way forward.
Oyegun who later spoke to journalists on
the decisions reached at the NEC meeting said that the body has
approved the down-sizing of the BoT membership before its formal
inauguration.
He said the NEC has given the leadership the nod to organise congresses to fill vacant seats in the NWC.
On the Rivers State election re-run, Oyegun said the party condemns the
barbaric acts that were perpetrated during the poll, warning that the
culprits would be fished out and punished. “People must not get away
with the dastardly acts and such should not be allowed to repeat itself
or spread to other states,” he said.
The Imo State governor, Chief Rochas
Okorocha, also expressed dismay over the violence during the Rivers
State election, describing it as unpardonable.
President Buhari arrived at exactly 11
am for the NEC meeting along with the Vice President, Prof. Yemi
Osinbajo, and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu
Dogara.
Oyegun and former Vice President Atiku
Abubakar had arrived 15 minutes earlier along with the Minister of
Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, and the Senate Leader,
Senator Ali Ndume. But the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki,
missed out on the meeting, obviously due to the date he had to keep at
the Code of Conduct Tribunal.
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