Former Cross River State
Governor Donald Duke has described President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime as a
government of many failings which is disconnected from reality.
Duke, who has declared his
intention to contest the Presidency, said the Buhari administration was not
ready for leadership and that was why it took the President nearly six months
to appoint ministers.
The presidential aspirant
said this during an interview with DW Africa.
When asked why he thought
he would be a better President than Buhari, he said, “Because I see such
obvious failings. I see a leadership that is steeped in the past; that has
refused to evolve with a nation that is predominantly a nation of young
aspiring people and still doing things the way they were done many years ago
and did not work.
“I think our leadership in
the country today is totally out of tune with the current reality of our
nation. There is disconnect somewhere so when you have a leadership that blames
its young people for instance of not striving enough or of being lazy, there is
a disconnect because the tools to make them achieve their aspiration have not
been provided.”
Duke, who became governor
at 37, said the standard of education had continued to worsen under the current
administration.
He said the health sector
was in crisis adding, “The President, himself, receives treatment abroad. That
is a sad state of affairs.”
The former governor said
the President had not excelled in the area of security and fighting corruption.
He said the Federal
Government was concentrating on fighting persons perceived to be corrupt
instead of building a system that could automatically prevent corruption.
When asked to state
Buhari’s worst problem, he said, “They were not prepared for leadership. For
example, it took six months to set up a cabinet. Where do you hear such?
President Buhari came into office to fight corruption and insecurity.
“Let us look at the
scorecard. Corruption is not dead. Prosecuting corruption is addressing the
symptom and not the problem. The real problem is you have got to create jobs
for people; you have got to strengthen institutions that make it almost impossible
to engage in such an activity.”
Duke also faulted the
government’s claim that Boko Haram had been defeated.
He said suicide bombings,
kidnappings were still occurring mainly in the North-East.
“They have announced that
the war is over and Bokom Haram has been defeated. We know it hasn’t been
defeated. There are still bombings and kidnappings in the North-East. If you
visit the IDPs, you will see that we are breeding the next generation of very
disgruntled people,” the ex-governor said.
Duke, who was governor from
1999 to 2007, said Nigeria’s economy ought to be growing at 15 per cent per
year for the next 10 years.
He said interests rates
must be lowered to encourage entrepreneurship and job creation.
The presidential aspirant
added, “You can’t grow your economy with the type of banking system we run
where the interest rate is in the upper 20s. You need to have affordable credit
which will enable small and medium scale businessmen to borrow and expand their
businesses.
“Nigeria grew faster when
we had regulation on interest rates; when the interest rates were in single
digits. Secondly, we have to grow the economy at 15 per cent for 10 years to
recalibrate the system.
“Nigeria ought to be a
$2.5tn economy and not a $400bn economy.”
No comments:
Post a Comment