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Why Buhari keeps borrowing ― Lai Mohammed

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GOVT'S LOANS

Alhaji Lai Mohammed, Nigeria’s Minister of Information and Culture, has said the President Buhari Administration is taking loans in order to build world-class infrastructure that will benefit generations of Nigerians and reverse the massive infrastructure deficit in the country.

The Minister stated this in Maiduguri, Borno State, on Thursday at a town hall meeting to address the vandalism of power and telecommunications infrastructure in the country.

“Naysayers have recently ramped up their criticism of the Buhari Administration for borrowing. These critics are insincere. We are not borrowing for recurrent expenditure or to pay salaries. We are borrowing to build world-class infrastructure that will benefit generations of Nigerians. And we have a lot to show for the loans we have taken.

“Today, the standard-gauge rail lines between Lagos and Ibadan as well as Abuja and Kaduna are running well. Today, we have new airport terminals in Abuja, Kano, Lagos and Port Harcourt. Today, the Itakpe-Warri rail line that was abandoned for decades is running,” he said.

Alhaji Mohammed, who said currently there are well over 13,000km of federal roads under repair, rehabilitation and reconstruction, emphasized that there is a road project in every state of the Federation.

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“Today, we have started the countdown to when the 2nd Niger Bridge, which successive administrations have built only on paper, will be completed. The list of projects we are handling with the loans we obtained is long,” he said.

“It is an irony that those who are criticizing us today performed abysmally in terms of modernizing our infrastructure, even when they served at a time when our earnings were multiples of what we get today. Had they embarked on the kind of infrastructure development we are currently engaged in, perhaps there would have been no reason for us to borrow as much as we are doing now.

“We will not be deterred by the antics of those who believe they can play politics with everything,” the Minister said.

He said despite a drastic drop in revenues and competing priorities, especially that of battling insecurity, the federal government has invested heavily in providing new infrastructure, as well as reconstructing and rehabilitating existing ones.

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Mohammed observed that in recent times, however, such laudable efforts of the government were being thwarted by some unpatriotic citizens through wanton destruction of critical infrastructure, thereby depriving the greater citizenry – for whose benefits these projects and services are provided – from enjoying them.

“Railway tracks are being subjected to wanton vandalism, bridge railings are being removed, manhole covers are being pilfered, and so are critical aviation, power and telecommunications infrastructure.

“The consequences of such unpatriotic action and behaviour, aside from endangering the lives of fellow innocent citizens include the toll it takes on the government’s limited revenue to replace, rehabilitate or totally reconstruct such destroyed infrastructure,” he said.

The Minister said the town meetings on the protection of infrastructure were meant to create in the public mind that government property are indeed citizens’ property and so must be protected for the benefit of all; sensitize communities especially those where infrastructure are located to be conscious of the import of such and protect them as well as expose, arrest and prosecute all those who engage in buying pilfered infrastructure items, along with those who bring to them to sell.

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In his address on the occasion, the Governor of Borno State, Prof. Babagana Zulum, thanked the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Mohammed, for promoting participatory democracy through the town hall meeting series, which he described as a veritable platform for citizens’ engagement and public sensitization.

He said Borno State had been in total darkness for about nine months due to the nefarious activities of the Boko Haram terrorists, who bombed high tension cables and other power infrastructure.

The Governor commended President Buhari for coming to the rescue of the state by directing the NNPC to establish a gas power plant to service the citizens as well as for the plan to set up a 150 megawatts solar energy plant in the state.

 

 

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You can’t stop wedding of 100 girls, ex-Niger commissioner tells minister

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Jonathan Vatsa, a former commissioner for information and culture in Niger state, says the proposed wedding of 100 girls in the state will go on despite public outcry.

 

Abdulmalik Sarkindaji, the speaker of the Niger state house of assembly, had dissociated himself from the wedding after Uju Kennedy-Ohanenye, minister of women affairs, threatened to sue him.

 

The minister said the development was unacceptable, arguing that the girls should be in school or learning vocational skills.

 

Sarkindaji, who had provided financial support and was billed to host the event on May 24, withdrew his involvement.

 

The speaker said it was at the discretion of the girls’ parents and traditional leaders to proceed as they deemed fit.

 

Addressing journalists on Wednesday, Vatsa, a chieftain of the All Progressive Congress (APC), advised Kennedy-Ohanenye not to go into “issues that she knows nothing about”.

 

He said the minister knew nothing about the situation of the girls and should have done due diligence before issuing threats.

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“No amount of threat of court action can stop these parents from giving out their daughters in marriage after receiving the necessary supports,” Vatsa said.

 

“The minister should have done her investigation first to know if these girls have attained the age of marriage by law or if they were being forced into marriage before going to the air to threaten the speaker, who is merely offering assistance.

“You cannot just sit in an air-conditioned office in Abuja and be threatening people without knowing what these orphans are going through after losing their parents to insecurity and those whose parents cannot afford their marriage expenses even though they have attained the age for marriage.

 

“Does the minister have any plans for people whom she has never seen or known about their plight, or is she trying to encourage prostitution in the area?

 

“You don’t play politics by interfering with the people’s culture and tradition; more so that these girls have suitors who want to marry them.

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“I am sure the speaker, being a trained lawyer, is not afraid of going to court. The speaker is not giving the girls out in marriage but just rendering support to the families, and there is no law in Nigeria that forbids someone from giving assistance towards marriage. That is why I said the minister is fighting a lost battle.”

 

Vatsa said banditry activities across 12 LGAs of the state have produced over 5,000 orphans, widows, and widowers.

 

He urged the minister to visit Niger and “see the sufferings of these orphans, the majority of whom are girls.”.

 

He urged Sarkindaji not to succumb to any threat, as “the people will feel disappointed if you withdraw your support for them”.

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‘71 children, 48 women’ — 150 Nigerians repatriated from Chad

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The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) says it has received 150 stranded Nigerians repatriated from the Chad Republic.

 

In a statement on Wednesday, the agency said the repatriated Nigerians include 71 children, 48 females, eight infants, and 23 men.

 

The agency said the evacuated Nigerians arrived at the Muritala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, on Tuesday at about 8:30 pm.

 

“The Nigerians were assisted back in a voluntary repatriation exercise programme by the United Nations International Organisation for Migration (UN’IOM) on Tuesday, 14th, 2024,” the agency said.

 

“The flight Air Cargo with registration number SU-BUR landed at the cargo wing of Muritala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja, at about 2030 hours.

 

“The profiles of the returnees indicate that 23 males, 48 females, 71 children, and 8 infants arrived in Nigeria aboard the flight.

 

“Some of the returnees demonstrated their joy at the success of their return back to Nigeria. Agencies on the ground to receive the Nigerians were NEMA, Immigration Services, Nigeria Port Health Services, FAAN, and the Nigeria Refugee Commission.”

READ  Buhari focused on delivering credible poll, not aware of elements in Aso Villa - FG replies el-Rufai

 

Last year, 104 stranded Nigerians were repatriated from N’Djamena, the capital of the Chad Republic.

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Minimum wage: FG’s N48,000 proposal makes no sense — TUC

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The Trade Union Congress (TUC) has rejected the N48,000 proposed by the Federal Government as the new minimum wage, saying it does not make any sense.

The TUC President, Festus Osifo berated the FG’s proposal while speaking in an interview on Channels Television’s Politics Today on Wednesday.

Osifo said the federal government was not being serious in the negotiation with the workers.

According to Osifo, the least federal workers are already earning up to N77,000, saying proposing N48,000 at the moment is ‘abysmal.’

 

He said, “Before President Muhammadu Buhari left office, the last person in the federal ministry was actually earning N42,000.

“If you now factor in the wage award of N35,000 that was given, N42,000 plus N35,000 will give us N77,000, so as of today what the least federal government worker earns is N77,000.

 

“So, the question that we now ask is that if the least federal government worker is earning N77,000, why are you now coming to present N48,000? It does not just make any sense,” he said.

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Osifor challenged the Federal Government to come forward with data backing the N48,000 proposal and convince the union members on how that amount reflect the reality of the average Nigerian worker.

Recall that earlier on Wednesday, the labour unions walked out of the ongoing minimum wage negotiations with the government and the Organised Private Sector following what the union leaders described as a ridiculous offer by the government.

 

The TUC leader said that at the meeting, the labour unions proposed a N615,000 minimum wage which they gave a breakdown of how it was arrived at.

 

He said that the government on its part presented N48,000 with no breakdown of how it can cater for the needs of the Nigerian workers.

 

According to Osifo, failure to back the N48,000 proposal up with data shows unpreparedness on the part of the government which was why the union leaders walked out of the meeting.

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He said that the union members still maintain that all conversations around a new national minimum wage must be concluded by the end of May.

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