Nigeria poverty rate has
increased by the same proportion with annual budget since 1999 because the
appropriated funds have mostly ended up in the pockets of few looters.
The Minister of Information
and Culture Alh Lai Mohammed stated this on Tuesday during his meeting with
Abuja Bureau Chiefs in Abuja.
He said that no amount of
attacks will deter the administration from prosecuting the war against
corruption in its efforts to save the country from collapse, insisting that the
Federal Government will not be cowed or distracted on the ongoing fight against
corruption.
‘‘The pseudo-analysts and
hack writers will labour in vain in their quest to stop the train of this
anti-corruption fight,” the Minister said.
”When I met with the News
and Political Editors in Lagos on Sunday, I said, among other things, that the
government is aware that in fighting corruption, corruption will also fight
back. I also said that those who stole us dry are powerful. They have
newspapers, radio and television stations as well as online platforms, and an
army of supporters to continuously deride the government’s war against
corruption.
”Well, I can tell you today
that corruption is already fighting back, and it is fighting hard and dirty.
Sponsored articles have started appearing in the newspapers and in the Social
Media, while ‘Talking Heads’ have started making the rounds in the electronic
media, all deriding the fight against corruption as well as this
Administration.
”Not stopping there, they
have been creating distractions by sponsoring articles in both local and
international media to deride the administration’s policies generally, tag the
President a budding dictator and even write off his 2016 budget. We know that
the sole purpose of these attacks is to distract attention from the war on
corruption,” he said.
‘‘The cost of corruption is
evidenced in the rate poverty in the country. Whereas Nigeria’s national budget
has increased from just over 900 billion Naira in 1999 to over 6 trillion Naira
in 2016, poverty has also increased almost by the same proportion. The reason is
not far fetched: Appropriated funds have mostly ended up in the pockets of a
few looters.
‘‘When the money meant to
construct roads are looted, the end result is that the roads are not built and
the people suffer and even die in avoidable road accidents. When the money
meant to provide electricity is looted, we all are perpetually sentenced to
darkness. When the money meant for healthcare is pocketed by a few, we are
unable to reduce maternal and infant mortality.
‘‘These are the costs of
corruption. Let us not just talk about corruption in the abstract, let us be
counting its cost to our lives, in order to drive home the point that
corruption must be tackled decisively for Nigerians to feel the impact of
governance.
The Minister said it was
saddening that some otherwise credible voices have unwittingly allowed
themselves to be railroaded into the bandwagon of pro-corruption orchestra”,
while some ”hack writers” are struggling to whittle down the impact of the
anti-corruption campaign.

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