Mr Fashola argued that one
year was a short time for government to deliver on all its campaign promises,
while giving an account of his term in office.
The Minister of Works,
Power and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, has attributed the poor electricity
supply across Nigeria to attacks on oil installations in the Niger Delta region
by militants.
The Minister said this on
Thursday at a forum organised by members of a civil society organisation in
Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.
According to Mr Fashola,
out of the 26 power plants built to generate electricity across the country, 23
depend on gas, lamenting that the activities of vandals in the southern region
had made it impossible to power those plants.
However, some members of
the civil society groups in the audience expressed displeasure with the
Minister’s reason for the present condition of electricity supply in the
country.
On their parts, the
Minister of Information and Culture, Mr Lai Mohammed, and the Minister of
Budget and National Planning, Senator Udo Udoma, insisted that the government
has made progress in delivering on its promises to fight corruption, tackle
insecurity and trying to fix the economy.
The Director Centre for
Democracy and Development, Idayat Hassan, said the objective of the gathering
was to provide an opportunity for the All Progressives Congress-led
administration to give account of its stewardship in the last one year in line
with its campaign promises.
The meeting is coming on
the heels of the series of attacks on infrastructure in the oil rich Niger
Delta region by militant group, Niger Delta Avengers, which is said to have
rendered the energy sector paralytic.
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