Saturday 24 September 2016

'Past Leaders Are To Blame For Militancy, Economic Lull'


President Muhammadu Buhari has stated that he would never complain about the situation in which he found Nigeria after assuming the leadership of the country, noting that he prayed hard to God to enable him to become Nigeria’s president.
In a meeting with a selection of Nigerian professionals, Buhari offered a survey of the country’s crises but said he did not regret seeking the office of president.
“I prayed so hard for God to make me President. I ran in 2003, 2007, 2011, and in 2015, He did. And see what I met on ground. But I can't complain since I prayed for the job.
“In the military, I rose from 2nd Lieutenant to Major General. I was military governor in 1975 over a state that is now six states.
“I was head of state, got detained for three years, and headed the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF), which had N53 billion of that time in Nigerian banks.
“God has been very good to me, so I can't complain. If I feel hurt by anybody, I ask God to help me forgive. He has done so much for me.”
Buhari has been in the US for close to a week to attend the United Nations General Assembly, and left US, Saturday, for Nigeria.
In a press statement, Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, revealed that the professionals who met with Buhari included, “top flight aeronautics engineers, physicians, I.T. experts, a judge, a top policewoman, entrepreneurs, an import specialist at Customs and Border Protection, professors, two straight ‘A’ students.”
“I am very pleased with this meeting,” Buhari told his audience, adding, “Wherever you go in the world, you find highly competent and outstanding Nigerians. They not only make great impact on their host countries and communities, their financial remittances back home also help our economy, particularly at a time like this, when things are down.”
He implored the professionals to lend a hand in order to fix the problems in their home country.
Buhari blamed the country’s current economic woes on the fact that “we did not save for the rainy day.”
He added: “For example, between 1999 and 2015, when we produced an average of 2.1 million barrels of oil per day, and oil prices stood at an average of $100 per barrel, we did not save, neither did we develop infrastructure. Suddenly, when we came in 2015, oil prices fell to about $30 per barrel.
“I asked where are the savings? There were none. Where are the railways? The roads? Power? None. I further asked, what did we do with billions of dollars that we made over the years? They said we bought food. Food with billions of dollars? I did not believe, and still do not believe.
“In most parts of Nigeria, we eat what we grow. People in the South eat tubers, those in the North eat grains, which they plant, and those constitute over 60 per cent of what we eat. So, where did the billions of dollars go? We did a lot of damage to ourselves by not developing infrastructure when we had the money,” he said.
He told his audience that those who looted Nigeria’s treasury were behind the militancy in the oil-producing Niger Delta, where oil pipelines and other infrastructure have come under incessant attacks.
“Those who stole Nigeria dry are not happy. They recruited the militants against us in the Niger Delta, and began to sabotage oil infrastructure. We lose millions of barrels per day, at a time when every dollar we can earn, counts. It is a disgrace that a minimum of 27 states, out of 36 that we have in Nigeria, can't pay salaries,” Buhari said.
He told the professionals that their country needs “quality hands to run Nigeria, and we will utilize them.”
Adesina reported that all the Nigerian professionals pledged to contribute their quota towards re-launching their country.
Source: SaharaReporters

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