The Country, Better than We Met It in 2015- Buhari
The President,
Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday gave an assessment of his five-year-old
administration with a submission that Nigeria now fared better than when he
assumed office in May 2015.
Buhari also
tasked the Nigerian elite to be fair in their critique of his administration.
President Buhari,
spoke while receiving in audience the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian
Christian Pilgrims Commission, Rev. Yakubu Pam, painted a bad picture of the
economy, infrastructure as well as the security situation in the North-east as
at the time he became president on May 29, 2015.
Buhari’s
media adviser, Femi Adesina, in a release, said his principal in
charging Nigerians, especially the elite, to be fair in their criticism of
the present administration having at the back of their mind the position of
things in 2015 and post 2015.
He
said: “Those criticising the administration should be fair in terms of
reflecting on where we were before we came, where we are now and what resources
are available to us and what we have done with the limited resources.
“We had to
struggle paying debts, investing in road repairs and rebuilding, to revamp the
rail and try to get power. This is what I hope the elite, when they want to
criticise will use to compare notes.”
On the
security situation especially in the North-east, the president pointedly asked:
“What was the situation when we came? Try and ask people from Borno or from
Adamawa for that matter and Yobe. What was the condition before we came and
what is the condition now?”
Buhari added
that although there were still some security skirmishes in the North-east but
the situation had since improved.
He said:
“Still, there are problems in Borno and Yobe, there are occasional Boko Haram
problems, but they know the difference because a lot of them moved
out of their states and moved to Kaduna, Kano and here (in Abuja). We were not
spared of the attacks at a time. The government is doing its best and I hope
that eventually, our best will be good enough.”
The
president also assured Nigerians that the welfare of Internally Displaced
Persons (IDPs) was paramount on the agenda of government.
“The people
in IDP camps, the weak, aged, I feel sorry for the young because this is the
time they are supposed to get education. We must not allow this time to pass
because it will never be regained. So we are really interested in what is
happening there and we are doing our best.”
He commended
the Executive Secretary on his appointment and activities on peace building
around the country despite his short time in the saddle and assured him of the
listening ear of the government whenever he has contributions to make.
Speaking
earlier, Rev. Pam intimated the president with some of the activities of
the Commission since he was appointed in July 2020.
These, he
said, included the organisation of Peace Summit on Southern Kaduna as well as
peace building efforts in Plateau, Benue, Taraba and Nasarawa States,
adding that the Commission is proposing to host Christian religious leaders
at a summit to help douse pressures within the polity.
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