Dear
Nigerians, I bring you good wishes from President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR,
who as we all know is away from the country on medical vacation.
1.
Today marks the second anniversary of our assumption of office.
We must thank the Almighty God not only for preserving our lives to celebrate
this second anniversary, but for giving us hope, strength and confidence as we
faced the challenges of the past two years.
2.
Our administration outlined three specific areas for our
immediate intervention on assumption of office. These were Security, Corruption
and the Economy.
3.
In the Northeast of our country, the terrorist group Boko
Haram openly challenged the sovereignty and continued existence of the state,
killing, maiming, and abducting, causing the displacement of the largest
number of our citizens in recent history. Beyond the North East they extended
their mindless killings, as far away as Abuja, Kano And Kaduna.
4.
But with new leadership and renewed confidence our gallant
military immediately began to put Boko Haram on the back foot. We have restored
broken-down relations with our neighbours, Chad, Cameroon and Niger – allies
without whom the war against terror would have been extremely difficult to win.
We have re-organised and equipped our Armed Forces, and inspired them to heroic
feats; we have also revitalised the regional Multinational Joint Task Force, by
providing the required funding and leadership.
5.
The positive results are clear for all to see. In the last two
years close to one million displaced persons have returned home. 106 of our
daughters from Chibok have regained their freedom, after more than two years in
captivity, in addition to the thousands of other captives who have since tasted
freedom.
6.
Schools, hospitals and businesses are springing back to life
across the Northeast, especially in Borno State, the epicentre of the crisis.
Farmers are returning to the farms from which they fled in the wake of Boko
Haram. Finally, our people are getting a chance to begin the urgent task of
rebuilding their lives.
7.
Across the country, in the Niger Delta, and in parts of the
North Central region, we are engaging with local communities, to understand
their grievances, and to create solutions that respond to these grievances
adequately and enduringly.
8.
President Buhari’s New Vision for the Niger Delta is a
comprehensive peace, security and development plan that will ensure that the
people benefit fully from the wealth of the region, and we have seen to it that
it is the product of deep and extensive consultations, and that it has now
moved from idea to execution. Included in that New Vision is the long-overdue
environmental clean-up of the Niger Delta beginning with Ogoni-land, which we
launched last year.
9.
More recent threats to security such as the herdsmen clashes
with farmers in many parts of the country sometimes leading to fatalities
and loss of livelihoods and property have also preoccupied our security
structures. We are working with state governments, and tasking our security
agencies with designing effective strategies and interventions that will bring
this menace to an end. We are determined to ensure that anyone who uses
violence, or carries arms without legal authority is apprehended and
sanctioned.
10.
In the fight against corruption, we have focused on
bringing persons accused of corruption to justice. We believe that the looting
of public resources that took place in the past few years has to be accounted
for. Funds appropriated to build roads, railway lines, and power plants, and to
equip the military, that had been stolen or diverted into private pockets, must
be retrieved and the culprits brought to justice. Many have said that the
process is slow, and that is true, corruption has fought back with tremendous
resources and our system of administration of justice has been quite slow. But
the good news for justice is that our law does not recognise a time bar for the
prosecution of corruption and other crimes, and we will not relent in our
efforts to apprehend and bring corruption suspects to justice. We are also
re-equipping our prosecution teams, and part of the expected judicial
reforms is to dedicate some specific courts to the trial of corruption cases.
11.
We are also institutionalizing safeguards and deterrents. We
have expanded the coverage of the Treasury Single Account (TSA). We have
introduced more efficient accounting and budgeting systems across the Federal
Government. We have also launched an extremely successful Whistleblower Policy.
12.
The Efficiency Unit of the Federal Ministry of Finance has
succeeded in plugging leakages amounting to billions of naira, over the last
two years. We have ended expensive and much-abused fertilizer and petrol
subsidy regimes.
13.
We have taken very seriously our promise to save and invest for
the future, even against the backdrop of our revenue challenges, and we have in
the last two years added $500million to our Sovereign Wealth Fund and $87
million to the Excess Crude Account. This is the very opposite of the situation
before now, when rising oil prices failed to translate to rising levels of
savings and investment.
14.
Admittedly, the economy has proven to be the biggest challenge
of all. Let me first express just how concerned we have been, since this
administration took office, about the impact of the economic difficulties on
our citizens.
15.
Through no fault of theirs, some companies shut down their
operations, others downsized; people lost jobs, had to endure rising food
prices. In some states, civil servants worked months on end without the
guarantee of a salary, even as rents and school fees and other expenses
continued to show up like clockwork.
16.
We have been extremely mindful of the many sacrifices that you
have had to make over the last few years. And for this reason, this
administration’s work on the economic front has been targeted at a combination
of short-term interventions to cushion the pain, as well as medium to long term
efforts aimed at rebuilding an economy that is no longer helplessly dependent
on the price of crude oil.
17.
Those short-term interventions include putting together a series
of bailout packages for our State Governments, to enable them bridge their
salary shortfalls – an issue the President has consistently expressed his
concerns about. We also began the hard work of laying out a framework for our
Social Intervention Programme, the most ambitious in the history of the
country.
1.
One of the first tasks of the Cabinet and the Economic
Management Team was to put together a Strategic Implementation Plan for the
2016 budget, targeting initiatives that would create speedy yet lasting impact
on the lives of Nigerians.
1.
Indeed, much of 2016 was spent clearing the mess we inherited
and putting the building blocks together for the future of our dreams; laying a
solid foundation for the kind of future that you deserve as citizens of
Nigeria.
1.
In his Budget Presentation Speech to the National Assembly last
December, President Buhari outlined our Economic Agenda in detail, and assured
that 2017 -would be the year in which you would begin to see tangible benefits
of all the planning and preparation work. It is my pleasure to note that in the
five months since he delivered that speech, we have seen tremendous progress,
as promised.
1.
Take the example of our Social Investment Programme, which
kicked off at the end of 2016. Its Home-Grown School Feeding component is now
feeding more than 1 million primary school children across seven states and
would be feeding three million by the end of the year. N-Power, another
component has engaged 200,000 unemployed graduates – none of whom needed any
‘connections’ to be selected. Beneficiaries are already telling the stories of
how these initiatives have given them a fresh start in their lives.
2.
Micro credit to a million artisans, traders and market men and
women has begun. While conditional cash transfers to eventually reach a million
of the poorest and most vulnerable households has also begun.
3.
Road and power projects are ongoing in every part of the
country. In rail, we are making progress with our plans to attract hundreds of
millions of dollars in investment to upgrade the existing 3,500km narrow-gauge
network. We have also in 2017 flagged-off construction work on the Lagos-Ibadan
leg of our standard-gauge network, and are close to completing the first phase
of Abuja’s Mass Transit Rail System.
4.
In that Budget speech in December, the President announced the
take-off of the Presidential Fertilizer Initiative. Today, five months on, that
Initiative – the product of an unprecedented bilateral cooperation with the
Government of Morocco – has resulted in the revitalisation of 11 blending
plants across the country, the creation of 50,000 direct and indirect jobs so
far, and in the production of 300,000 metric tonnes of NPK fertilizer, which is
being sold to farmers at prices significantly lower than what they paid last
year. By the end of 2017, that Fertilizer Initiative would have led to foreign
exchange savings of US$200 million; and subsidy savings of 60 billion naira.
5.
The Initiative is building on the solid gains of the Anchor
Borrowers Programme, launched in 2015 to support our rice and wheat farmers, as
part of our move towards guaranteeing food security for Nigeria.
6.
All of this is evidence that we are taking very seriously our
ambition of agricultural self-sufficiency. I am delighted to note that since
2015 our imports of rice have dropped by 90 per cent, while domestic production
has almost tripled. Our goal is to produce enough rice to meet local demand by
2019. In April, the President launched our Economic Recovery and Growth
Plan which built on the foundations laid by the Strategic Implementation Plan
of 2016. The plan has set forth a clear vision for the economic
development of Nigeria. I will come back to this point presently.
7.
Another highlight of the President’s Budget Speech was our work
around the Ease of Doing Business reforms. As promised we have since followed
up with implementation and execution. I am pleased to note that we are now
seeing verifiable progress across several areas, ranging from new Visa on
Arrival scheme, to reforms at our ports and regulatory agencies.
8.
The President also promised that 2017 would see the rollout of
Executive Orders to facilitate government approvals, support procurement of
locally made goods, and improve fiscal responsibility. We have kept that
promise. This month we issued three Executive Orders to make it easier for
citizens to get the permits and licenses they require for their businesses, to
mandate Government agencies to spend more of their budgets on locally produced
goods, and to promote budget transparency and efficiency. The overarching idea
is to make Government Agencies and Government budgets work more efficiently for
the people.
9.
The impact of our Ease of Doing Business work is gradually being
felt by businesses small and large; its successful take-off has allowed us to
follow up with the MSME Clinics -our Small Business support programme,
which has taken us so far to Aba, Sokoto, Jos, Katsina, and we expect to be
in all other states in due course.
10.
Let me note, at this point, that several of our Initiatives are
targeted at our young people, who make up most of our population. From N-Power,
to the Technology Hubs being developed nationwide, to innovation competitions
such as the Aso Villa Demo Day, and our various MSME support schemes, we will
do everything to nurture the immense innovative and entrepreneurial potential
of our young people. We are a nation of young people, and we will ensure that
our policies and programmes reflect this.
11.
One of the highlights of our Power Sector Recovery Programme,
which we launched in March, is a N701 billion Naira Payment Assurance Scheme
that will resolve the financing bottlenecks that have until now constrained the
operations of our gas suppliers and generation companies. Let me assure that
you will soon begin to see the positive impact of these steps.
12.
Our Solid Minerals Development Fund has also now taken off, in
line with our commitment to developing the sector. Because of our unerring
focus on Solid Minerals development over the last two years, the sector has,
alongside Agriculture, seen impressive levels of growth – in spite of the
recession.
13.
On the whole, just as the President promised in the Budget
Speech, these early months of 2017 have seen the flowering of the early fruit
of all the hard work of our first eighteen months.
14.
We opened the year with an overwhelmingly successful Eurobond
Offer – evidence of continuing investor interest in Nigeria. We have also
launched the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) 2017-2020, to build on
the gains of last year’s Strategic Implementation Plan. And the implementation
of our 2017 Budget, which will soon be signed into law, will bring added
impetus to our ongoing economic recovery. In the 2016 Budget we spent 1.2
Trillion Naira on infrastructure projects, another milestone in the history of
this country. Our 2017 Budget will double that investment.
15.
That budget also provides for substantial investment to implement
the rollout of Industrial Parks and Special Economic Zones (SEZs), as well as
our Social Housing Programme. The Industrial Parks and Economic Zones will
fulfil our ambition of making Nigeria a manufacturing hub, while the Family
Home Fund of our Social Housing Programme will provide inexpensive
mortgages for low-income individuals and families across the country.
16.
These plans offer yet more evidence that we are ramping up the
pace of work; the work of fulfilling all that we promised. In the next two
years, we will build on the successes of the last two. We have demonstrated a
willingness to learn from our mistakes and to improve on our successes. The
critical points that we must address fully in the next two years are:
Agriculture and food security, Energy, (power and Petroleum,) Industrialization
and Transport infrastructure. Every step of the way we will be working with the
private sector, giving them the necessary incentives and creating an
environment to invest and do business.
17.
Our vision is for a country that grows what it eats and produces
what it consumes. It is for a country that no longer has to import petroleum
products, and develops a lucrative petrochemical industry. Very
importantly it is for a country whose fortunes are no longer tied to the price
of a barrel of crude, but instead to the boundless talent and energy of its
people, young and old, male and female as they invest in diverse areas of the
economy.
18.
And that vision is also for a country where the wealth of the
many will no longer be stolen by or reserved for a few; and where the impunity
of corruption – whether in the public or private sectors – will no longer be
standard operating practice; a land rid of bandits and terrorists.
19.
As citizens, you all deserve a country that works, not merely
for the rich or connected, but for everyone. And our promise to you is that we
will, with your support and cooperation, take every step needed to create that
country of our dreams.
20. We also
know that this journey will of necessity take time. But we will not succumb to
the temptation to take short-cuts that ultimately complicate the journey. We
did not find ourselves in crises overnight, and we simply do not expect
overnight solutions to our challenges.
21.
The most important thing is that we are on the right path, and
we will not deviate from it, even in the face of strong temptation to choose
temporary gain over long-term benefit. As the President has summed it up: “The
old Nigeria is slowly but surely disappearing, and a new era is rising.”
22. And so,
we commemorate this second anniversary of our administration with confidence
and optimism. I firmly believe that we have put the most difficult phase behind
us; and we are witnesses to the ever-increasing intensity of the light at the
end of the tunnel. We ask for your continued cooperation and support, to enable
us realise all our best intentions and ambitions for Nigeria. On our part, we
will continue to carry you along on this journey, speak to you, explain the
challenges, and share our Vision.
23. And
while we all daily pre-occupy ourselves with pursuing the Nigerian Dream –
which is the desire to better our lives and circumstances vigorously and
honestly – it is inevitable that grievances and frustrations will arise from
time to time.
24. This is
normal. What is not normal, or acceptable, is employing these frustrations as
justification for indulging in discrimination or hate speech or hateful conduct
of any kind, or for seeking to undermine by violent or other illegal means the
very existence of the sovereign entity that has brought us all together as
brothers and sisters and citizens.
25.
Nigeria belongs to all of us. No one person or group of persons
is more important or more entitled than the other in this space that we all
call home. And we have a responsibility to live in peace and harmony with one
another, to seek peaceful and constitutional means of expressing our wishes and
desires, and to resist all who might seek to sow confusion and hatred for their
own selfish interests.
26. Before
I end this speech, let me ask for your continued prayers for the restoration to
full health and strength and the safe return of our President.
27.
I congratulate all of you on today’s commemoration of this
important day in the democratic calendar our country. Nigeria is on a journey
of greatness, and together we shall arrive at the destination of our dreams.
28. May God
bless you all, and bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
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