President Muhammadu Buhari has revealed how the Country got
into the present economic crisis, blaming the current recession in the country
not only on the failure of past leaders to save for rainy days, but their
failure to develop infrastructures.
Speaking while briefing top Nigerian professionals from
different parts of the United States, U.S, he stated that upon assumption of
office, he was told that the billions of dollar generated from the export of
crude oil over the years was used in buying food, despite that Nigerians grow
what is consumed in the country.
He stated that those who stole Nigeria dry are not happy
with his government’s efforts in tackling the country’s challenges, explaining
that this was why “they recruited the militants against us in the Niger Delta,
and began to sabotage oil infrastructure.”
The President had during the May Day celebration at the
Eagle Square, Abuja, blamed the previous for the current bad economic situation
in the country, asserting that the emergence of the All Progressives Congress,
APC, brought an end to the 16 years of squander by the Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP.
“I am very pleased with this meeting,” Buhari said in a
statement issued on Friday by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi
Adesina, adding that: “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.
“We got into trouble as a country, because we did not save
for the rainy day. 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
dollars 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.
“Talking of our military, they earned respect serving in
places like Burma, Zaire, Sudan, Liberia, Sierra-Leone, and then, suddenly,
that same military could no longer secure 14 out of 774 local governments in
the country. Insurgents had seized them, calling them some sort of caliphate,
and planting their flags there; till we came, and scattered them.
“We raised the morale of our military, changed the
leadership, re-equipped and retrained them; USA, Britain, and some other
countries helped us, and today, the pride of our military is restored.
“Boko Haram ran riot, killing innocent people in churches,
mosques, markets, schools, motor parks, and so on. And they would then shout
Allahu Akbar. But if they truly knew Allah, they would not do such evil.
Neither Islam, nor any other religion I know of, advocates hurting the
innocent. But they shed innocent blood, killed people in their thousands. Now,
we have dealt with that insurgency, and subverted their recruitment base.
“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.
“But 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.
“After 16 years of a different party in government, no party
will come and have things easy. It’s human. We need quality hands to run
Nigeria, and we will utilize them. I will like to welcome you home when it’s
time. But I’ll like you to be ready.”
Adesina, in the statement, disclosed that all the Nigerian
professionals pledged to contribute their quota towards re-launching their
fatherland to a new dawn.

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