*Pays outstanding N600 billion owed to fuel marketers in subsidy payments
By Levinus Nwabughiogu
ABUJA
– As a way of cushioning the effect of poverty and hunger in the land,
President Muhammadu Buhari on Sunday directed the Minister of
Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh to release 10,000 tons of grains from the
national strategic grains reserves for national distribution.
The
directive was also a counter measure to the current astronomic prices
of goods and seeming exploitation within the market system. The
president also directed the agriculture minister “to ensure that all the
able-bodied men and women in IDP camps be assisted to return to farming
immediately.”
President Buhari’s directive followed a
submission by a faction of the opposition Conference of Nigerian
Political Parties,CNPP, that Nigerians under the president’s watch were
facing unprecedented hardship. President’s charge was contained in a
statement by the Senior Special Assistant to the president on Media and
Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu.
Shehu in the statement also
stated that the president upon assumption of office paid off accumulated
subsidy debts of N600 billion owed to marketers. This was as he stated
that there were social programmes captured in the 2016 budgets to Bette
the lot of Nigerians. He refuted claims that the presidency would allow
Nigerians to suffer.
The statement read in part:
“The
Presidency however asserts that the devastation of the economy was
caused by the Boko Haram insurgency, corruption and the lack of planning
by the past administrations and one that should not be blamed on the
Change Agenda of the Muhammadu Buhari administration.
“The
Presidency firmly rejects the insinuations that poverty and lack are
products of the Change mantra. “This should be dismissed as an erroneous
and misplaced opposition criticism.
The President understands
the pain and the cries of the citizens of this country and he is
spending sleepless nights over how he can make life better for everyone.
“Contrary to assertions by a faction of the opposition Conference of
Nigerian Political Parties,CNPP, the President’s energy and focus are on
changing the life of Nigerians, with a view to making it better than he
met it.
“Change is a process. Change does not happen overnight.
Change can be inconvenient. Change sometimes comes with pain. Over the
past year, the government has been working night and day to deliver on
its promise of change to Nigerians, and the painful process is still
ongoing.
“This is work in progress. As life gradually returns to
normal in much of the country and the northeast in particular,
agriculture will resume and traders from neighbouring African countries
will once again feel safe to do business with us–yet another boost for
our economy.
“But it Is only when we appreciate where we are
coming that we will grasp the full meaning and essence of what the
ongoing journey entail

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