Minister of Information and
Culture, Lai Mohammed, on Tuesday said some looters, who stole from the
Nigerian treasury were now parading as messiah.
The Minister made the call when
the Chief Executive Officer of TVC Communications, Mr. Andrew Hanlon, paid him
a courtesy visit in his office inAbuja.
He noted that “the same people
who presided over yesterday’s looting of our treasury are today posing as
would-be saviours of Nigerians.”
“We are on a rescue mission.
However, the way a section of the media is reporting the challenges facing the
country today does not reflect that understanding.
“They are making a corrective
administration to look like the culprit, to give the impression that the rain
started beating us in Nigeria only from May, 29 2015, to play down the
challenges that this Administration has faced and which it is successfully
tackling.
“For example, we did not get to
where we are today in just three years. It has taken successive decades of bad
governance, unbridled corruption, and lack of probity, a culture of impunity
and a near state of anarchy.
“These are the ills this
Administration inherited and which it has set out to tackle, and this is what
the media must reflect in their reporting,” Mohammed said.
The Minister said the situation
of the country was prevented from becoming worse because of the prudence,
probity and the anti-corruption stance of the present administration.
He added: “Instead of recession,
Nigeriacould have had a total collapse of the economy and the power grid could
have collapsed.”
Mohammed further said that the
manner in which the government handled Boko Haram, prevented the insurgents
from overrunning Abuja just as it did major towns in the North East.
He also said that the country’s
“food imports could have tripled what it was pre-May, 29 2015 and the Naira
might have been worse hit.”
He said it was the responsibility
of the media to educate Nigerians about efforts been made by the administration
to rebuild the nation “almost from the scratch with 60 per cent less revenue”
while corrupt ones paint the government bad.
This, he added, was apart from
poor infrastructure, low power generation, trillions of naira wasted as fuel
subsidy, empty treasury and most parts of Borno under total control of
insurgents.
”Today, the trend is being
reversed and the results are showing as Foreign Reserves is now $42.8 billio,
inflation has fallen for 12 consecutive months to 15.13%, N108 billion has been
saved from the removal of maintenance fees payable to banks pre-TSA.
“The nation is saving N24.7
billion monthly with the full TSA implementation, the elimination of ghost
workers has saved the nation N120 billion, capital inflow reached $1.8 billion
in the second quarter of 2017, almost double the $908 million in the first
quarter.
“While Nigeria’s stock market is
one of the best-performing in the world, delivering returns in excess of 40 percent.
“Nigeria has also jumped 24
places on the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business ranking and earned a place on
the List of Top 10 Reformers in the world.
“The administration has
repeatedly given bailouts for states to pay salary.
“The administration’s
Agricultural Revolution is a huge success, with agriculture export up
year-on-year by 25%, rice import from Thailand dropping 644,000 metric tonnes
to 22,000 metric tonnes and rice farmers growing from 5 million to 12.3
million.
“The Home-Grown School Feeding
Programme has created jobs for 61,352 cooks, and it is providing 6.4 million
school children in 33,981 schools across 20 states with one meal a day,” he
said.
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