Former President Obasanjo Accused Buhari and Others of Witch-hunting past Administrations
Former President
Olusegun Obasanjo yesterday urged President Muhammadu Buhari to rise to the
challenges posed by the current recession in Nigeria, noting that orders,
wishful thinking and blame game would not solve the hapless state of affairs in
the country.
Buhari and Obasanjo Obasanjo also examined the manner the issues
of corruption, proposed external loan, and recession among others were being
responded to by the Federal Government and commended the government on the
anti-graft war but regretted that the government had no comprehensive policy
that would address the current state of despair in Nigeria.
Former President Obasanja warn President Buhari |
The former President,
who said these in Lagos at the first annual lecture of Akintola Williams
Foundation, said it was uncharitable for the present administration to be
blaming past governments that had served since 1999, noting that only a
comprehensive framework would save the country. Obasanjo, who spoke on the
theme: Nigeria, Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow: Governance and Accountability,
observed that Nigeria had the right people, who could be brought together to
help device the right economic policy that would get the country out of the
current economic woes. His words: “Again, now we are being told the projects
will pay themselves when we know damn well they will not. If we borrow some
thirty billion dollars in less than three years, we would have mortgaged the
future of Nigeria for well over thirty years to come. There may also be the
problem of absorptive capacity which will surely lead to waste.
A careful scrutiny of
the projects with prioritization and avoidance of waste and taking into account
avoiding bunching of debt service in future especially when no one can
accurately forecast the global and national economy will indicate less than
thirty per cent of the foreign loan being requested as prudent. We must not be
unmindful of internal borrowing either.
It impacts somewhat
differently on the economy but it must not be allowed to crowd out the ability
of the private sector to borrow to grow the real economy which is to lead us
out of the recession. If we do not fix the economy to relieve the pain and
anguish of many Nigerians, the gain in fighting insurgency and corruption will
pale into insignificance. “No administration can nor should be comfortable with
the excruciating pain of debilitating and crushing economy. Businesses are
closing, jobs are being lost and people are suffering. I know that President
Buhari has always expressed concern for the plight of the common people but
that concern must be translated to workable and result-oriented socio-economic
policy and programme that will turn the economy round at the shortest time
possible.
We cannot continue to
do the same thing and expect things to change. That will be a miracle which
normally doesn’t happen in normal national economies. We have people inside and
outside who can be brought together to help device the right economic policy
and programme to get us out of the pit before we fall over the precipice into a
dark cave “The blanket adverse comments or castigation of all democratic
administrations from 1999 by the present administration is uncharitable, fussy
and uninstructive. Politics apart, I strongly believe that there is a
distinction between the three previous administrations that it would be unfair
to lump them all together.
I understand President
Buhari’s frustration on the state of the economy inherited by him. It was the
same reason and situation that brought about the cry for change; otherwise,
there would be no need for change if it was all nice and rosy. “Now that we
have had change because the actors and the situation needed to be changed, let
us move forward to have progress through a comprehensive economic policy and
programme that is intellectually, strategically and philosophically based. I am
sure that such a comprehensive policy and programme will not support borrowing
US$30 billion in less than three years. It will give us the short-, medium- and
long-term picture.”
No comments