The Sultan of Sokoto and
Chairman of the occasion, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, set the tone for the
interactions between Buhari’s nine ministers and members of the public when he
said in his opening remarks that government policies should be reviewed if they
were not working.
Nigerians on Tuesday
tackled members of President Muhammadu Buhari’s cabinet about poverty and rot
in the country at a dramatic town hall meeting in Abuja.
He said, “If policies don’t
work, there is nothing wrong in reviewing them. The government must be open to
suggestions.
“If the people say they are
hungry, the government should listen to them.”
The Sultan said there were
11 ministers in the hall even though they were nine.1
He was jokingly referring
to the multiple portfolios occupied by the Minister of Power, Works and
Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola (SAN).
In his speech, the Minister
of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, said, “There is a cry in the air that
Nigerians are hungry and we hear them loud and clear. There are also
unbelievable stories about people taking their children as human collateral for
food with no intentions to pick them up.
“This situation in Nigeria
today was going to happen; whether it is this administration or another. We
headed this way a long time ago.
‘‘In 1986, we were forced
to devalue and deregulate. We were forced to open our doors to importation. We
began devaluing the naira. We have done it steadily for 30 years. We are now
N400 to one dollar and we are told to continue devaluing; that devaluation will
bring wonders. I don’t believe it.
“I hope we don’t hit N1,000
to $1 someday because the demand for dollars is $2.5bn a week and I have this
from high authorities within the system.
“We simply don’t have it.
We don’t print dollars, but the people are angry that we are not making dollars
available. We became importers of rice; $5m a day; wheat, $6m a day; tomato
paste, $400m a year; and $20bn a year on food.’’1
One of the participants,
the Vice-Chancellor of the Bingham University, Nasarawa State, Prof. Leonard
Kursim-Fwa, expressed worry about the state of education, infrastructure
deficiency and poor electricity, among others.
But a former
Director-General of the National Mathematical Centre, Prof. Sam Ale, said
electricity had improved since Fashola became the Minister of Power, Works and
Housing.
His remarks did not go down
well with the people in the hall, as there were murmurings of disapproval.
Another participant asked
Fashola why Nigeria continued to rely on gas for electricity when there were
alternatives in hydro and coal.
Fashola responded that
Zungeru and Mambilla hydro plants were being worked on.
He regretted that even
though Mambilla was conceived in 1982 when he was 19 years old, the project had
not been realised.
To a questioner who said
the three ministries being supervised by Fashola were too big for one minister,
Fashola said, “We have spoken about the cost of running the government, and in
trying to reduce that cost, the President decided to merge the three ministries.
“My work is supervisory and
today in the ministry of works and in the ministry of housing, there are over
4,000 personnel and the number is reducing. The ministry of power has about 800
workers today and the number is reducing.
“So, it is no longer a
government-driven sector, it is now a government-regulated sector driven by
private sector. And if you have issues about that, I think you should complain
to Mr. President.”
Another participant, Mr.
Farouk Mohammed, challenged the Federal Government for approving an exchange
rate of N197 to a dollar for pilgrims at a time of foreign exchange crisis and
economic recession.
Mohammed, a former OPEC
worker, expressed displeasure at subsidising pilgrims, saying such would
continue the cycle of wastage.
Responding, the Chairman of
the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, Mr. Abdullahi Mohammed, explained that
the commission requested that the pilgrims be granted the official exchange
rate when the dollar was still selling for N197 to a dollar.
He said the approval which
was granted did not amount to subsidy.
According to him, the fund
was warehoused in the Central Bank of Nigeria after the approval.
The Minister of Finance,
Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, was queried on ghost workers, continuous borrowing and why
so much was being spent on one per cent of the population that form the
government.
Adeosun said, “There is no
quick solution to the present challenge. There is a fundamental problem, but if
we can be patient, we shall get there.1
“We have a conservative borrowing
programme; and we must borrow to do rail and other projects — the rail that we
have now was done in the colonial era.
“We have to do rail to
enable agriculture and solid minerals to be competitive. I don’t see any other
option than to borrow.
“We will borrow
sustainably; we will borrow to make sure that we don’t burden future
generations.
“We have been borrowing in
the past to pay salaries; now we borrow to invest.”4
The Minister of Budget and
National Planning, Senator Udo Udoma, said, “When the budget was signed into
law in May, it set for us a 12-month implementation framework. So far, we have
released for capital projects N331bn. The bulk of it was power projects. The
National Assembly provided that it should run from when it was signed into law.
That means we have till May next year to implement all the capital projects.”
Some of the participants
wanted to know why the Minister of Education was not present at the forum
despite the rot in the education sector.
The Minister of Information
and Culture, Lai Mohammed, said the education minister was not part of the list
given to him by the organisers of the meeting – the alumni of the National
Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies.
Other ministers that
addressed the gathering are Geoffrey Onyeama (Foreign Affairs), Kayode Fayemi
(Solid Minerals Development), Amina Mohammed (Environment) and Prof. Isaac
Adewole (Health).
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