The group further said Atiku should note that President Buhari has been cleaning up the mess left by Atiku and his party’s leaders, who have not shown any form of remorse.
The Buhari Media Organisation,
BMO, has accused the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of being directly responsible for the poor
conditions of millions of Nigerians’ as head of the National Council on
Privatisation, NCP. The BMO also called on Atiku to heed the advice of his former boss, Olusegun Obasanjo, and seek proper forgiveness from Nigerians for the harm he did the country.
Chairman of the BMO, Niyi
Akinsiju, and Secretary, Cassidy Madueke, in a statement on Tuesday, noted that
the former Vice President was again pushing a false narrative ‘to fool
undiscerning Nigerians.’
“We are not surprised that
the former Vice-President has jumped on a United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) report issued last month to take a swipe at a man he clearly considers
as his nemesis,” the group added.
“The UN body had noted that
slightly over 98 million Nigerians were living in multi-dimensional poverty,
but, as usual, the PDP presidential candidate did not fully grasp the details
before launching an attack on President Buhari.
“The report indicated that
about 46 per cent of Nigerians were poor as at today, but Atiku Abubakar needs
to be reminded that 60.9 per cent of Nigerians, or 100 million people, were
living below the poverty threshold in 2010, and 120 million in 2012, according
to the World Bank, which is the body that provides a global poverty headcount.
“Interestingly, the period
the country had an exponential spike in the number of people living below $1 a
day was during the 16 unbroken years that the former Vice-President’s party
held sway in Nigeria.
“It is not a secret that
Alhaji Abubakar was the executor-in-chief of what has gone down in the annals
of the nation as a major heist of the nation’s assets, an action that later
pitched him against former President Obasanjo.
“He literally sold off
several government-owned enterprises for less than their market values to his
cronies to strip and cannibalise, and in the process, tens of thousands of
workers were denied their livelihood and laid off without benefits. It is also
on record that he kept one of the prized assets (Onne Port) to himself.
“Or, does he also have to
be reminded of the period when the nation’s Education sector virtually
collapsed but that was when he and former President Obasanjo established high
profile private secondary and tertiary institutions?
“So, if Atiku is searching
for the person who plunged Nigerians into multi-dimensional poverty, he should
just look into the nearest mirror, or maybe he could tell us how many people he
drove into penury and how many had their pensions paid, even after the terminal
date of the Obasanjo administration.
“In case he missed the
latest news, the Buhari administration, through its Pension Transitional
Arrangement Directorate (PTAD), has paid the outstanding severance package of
over 1,500 verified eligible former workers and next-of-kin of deceased former
workers of Savannah Sugar Company.
“The former Vice-President
cannot say he has forgotten that these workers were not paid their benefits
when they were disengaged in 2002, after the company was privatised.
“This is just one out of
many examples of how President Buhari has been cleaning up the mess left by
Atiku and his party’s leaders, who have not shown any form of remorse but are
rather prepared to also insult the sensibilities of Nigerians.”

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