President Muhammadu Buhari
yesterday expressed displeasure that former President Goodluck
Jonathan’s administration failed to save for the rainy day.
The President, who was represented by
the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, spoke
yesterday at the Hotel Presidential in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State
apital, at the opening of the 12th All Nigeria Editors’ Conference
(ANEC) 2016.
The conference, with the theme: Economic Diversification: Agriculture as Option for a Prosperous Nigeria, was attended by eminent personalities from across the country and beyond.
President Buhari said: “Nigeria has
nothing to rely on to cushion the effects of the lost earnings. Many
other oil producing countries and fellow Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) members are faring better, because they saved
for the rainy day. Saudi Arabia, with about one fifth of Nigeria’s
population, has in foreign reserves about $600 billion, which is 23
times what Nigeria has in foreign reserves.
“United Arab Emirates, with less than 10
million people, has $75 billion in foreign reserves. Qatar, with 2.4
million people, has $36 billion in foreign reserves. Even Angola, with
just 24 million people, has about $25 billion dollars in foreign
reserves.
“Here in Nigeria, with oil selling
consistently for over $100 a barrel for many years, we simply failed to
save for the rainy day, with the result that a country with a population
of over 170 million today has just $26 billion in foreign reserves.
“To compound this, the fall in the price
of crude oil is having a ripple effect: the scarcity of forex, which
has resulted from the oil price crash, means that industries are
struggling to get forex to import raw materials and machinery.
“With falling imports, the Customs
Service, which is another source of revenue, is collecting less duties.
Taxation is also affected, as industries with no Forex to import can
neither employ more people nor produce more goods. Then, Nigeria has had
to fight an existential battle to root out Boko Haram in the
Northeast.”
The President noted that the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and the media should become the champions of change.
He said: “What I am saying in essence is
that while the media owe it as a duty to keep Nigerians well informed
about the situation in the country, it must do so in context. We are not
saying we should continue to lament about missed opportunities, the
massive corruption or profligacy of the past, but it is important for
Nigerians to know where and when the rain started beating them, that no
provision was made for any umbrella to shield them from the elements and
that indeed genuine efforts are now being made to turn things around.”

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