Mr Buhari said when he
assumed office, he asked officials if there was enough money in the federal
coffers for him to spend and he got a negative response.
“I asked if there was any
savings and I was told there was no savings. I asked what they did on
agriculture, power, rails and roads. There was nothing,” Mr. Buhari said.
President Muhammadu Buhari
on Thursday said he contemplated running away from office shortly after he was
inaugurated as Nigeria’s president on May 29, 2015.
Mr. Buhari said the ongoing
economic crisis has made him feel as though he is suffering the consequences of
someone else’s transgressions.
The lamentations were part
of the president’s address to members of the National Institute for Policy and
Strategic Studies who visited him in the State House Thursday afternoon.
“Actually, I felt like
absconding,” Mr. Buhari said. “Because 27 out of 36 states in Nigeria cannot
pay salaries.”
Mr. Buhari said he also
discovered that Nigeria had no strategic highways and the available ones were
in a terrible state.
“You know more than I do
because you move around. I have not been moving around since after elections
but you do. How many of the Trunk A roads are still good enough?”
Mr. Buhari also said even
though cases of sabotage are frequently recorded in the power distribution,
that still failed to explain why Nigerians are still grappling with poor
electricity supply.
“How much power do we have
although there are some elements of sabotage?” Mr. Buhari said.
Mr. Buhari said his
government has been rendered largely helpless in the face of the economic
crisis because crude oil no longer sells at high prices as he had hoped.
“Between 1999 and 2015, the
average cost of each Nigerian barrel of oil was $100 per barrel. When we came
it fell to less $30 per barrel and is now hovering between $40 and $50,” the
president said.
The president said
officials also told him that the government was spending heavily to import fuel
and food items, an excuse he said he found ridiculous since Nigerians hardly
consume imported staple.
“I was told the money was
used to import food and fuel. I didn’t believe the answer and I still do not
believe it.”
“Up till now, a substantial
number of people in the East eat garri and groundnut; in the West they eat
pounded yam, cassava, vegetables; in the North, they eat tuwo which is made
from any of the grains: millet, sorghum.
“They eat it in the night
and warm it in the morning and eat it and take fura in the afternoon. How many
of those people can afford foreign food?”
Mr. Buhari also condemned
the fuel subsidy regime of his predecessors, saying it served as a conduit
which the Nigerian elite exploited to swindle the poor masses.
“Then they said I should
check out the petroleum sector. The legislature dedicated 445,000 barrels per
day for internal consumption and that is just 60 per cent of our requirements.
I said ‘okay, what of the 40 per cent?’
“The marketers that are
bringing it just present documents, papers are just stamped and monies are
taken away.
“This is the type of things
that the Nigerian elites are doing for our own country. When you go back, look
at your colleagues and encourage them to be truly Nigerians.”
The president, however,
vowed to do all in his capacity to resolve the economic crisis.
Mr. Buhari defeated
incumbent Goodluck Jonathan in a keently-contested election in March 2015.
You for resign now
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