FG REVEALS HOW MUCH POLITICIANS AND THEIR GIRLFRIENDS WHO VISITED GOODLUCK JONATHAN IN ASO ROCK WERE GIVEN
The Special Adviser to President
Muhammadu Buhari on Political Matters, Senator Babafemi Ojudu has
revealed that under previous administrations, a chief or politician who
pays a visit to the Aso Rock Presidential Villa is handed $100,000 or
$50,000 when leaving.
Speaking in an interview with Leadership
newspapers, the presidency official, however, pointed out that his
principal has put a stop to the practice as such cash gifts are now
diverted into productive services and the provision of infrastructure.
In the words of Ojudu, “In the past,
somebody would come to Aso Rock, a chief or a politician. And they
package $100,000, $50,000 for him. The man gets back to his hotel room,
dashes his driver $500, dashes his PA $1,000, his girl friend $200. This
has stopped. Such money must go into productive services, medical
services, infrastructure etc.
“Let’s do something that is enduring for
our people. All these stop gap measures, going as subsidies, we’re
going to stop them. Let’s make our refineries work. Don’t let us make
millionaires of a few and poor people of millions.
“These are the kinds of problems we’re
having now. In the process of change, all these things are bound to
happen. This is one year, but again, this new government never envisaged
things will be this difficult.
“When we were campaigning, oil was still
$112 per barrel. Nobody could have thought it would just crash and
become $33 per barrel. We’re now on $40 per barrel. Nobody envisaged
that our foreign reserve could go as low as $28 billion. We were
importing food. We were importing medication, we were paying school fees
of millions of Nigerians abroad. What the government is doing now is:
let’s take subsidy away from these individuals that are getting it.
Let’s take money off bringing in food,
let’s grow what we’re going to feed on. This is going to take some time;
it’s not something that is going be done overnight. Nigerians will have
to be patient. I can understand. People call me every day that, they
can’t pay school fees, they can’t pay house rent. But again, if we want
Nigeria to grow, if we want sustainable development, we cannot but
breakaway from the past. It is this breaking away from the past, that is
causing the pain we’re going through as a nation.
“What people are saying is just like
saying ‘bring back corruption’. They don’t know what corruption has done
to this country. You vote about a billion naira for a hospital, and
N800 million is taken away by corruption, and you have only N200 million
left. So, there won’t be medication, there won’t be ambulances etc you
can imagine how many people die due to such act. They stash such money
outside the country. They buy houses in America, buy private jets etc.
“Do you know the havoc that corruption
has done to this country over the years? That is why we now have
half-baked graduates. Do you know what corruption has done to our
infrastructure over the years? Look at the Abuja-Lokoja Road. What you
have now is not the original design. Look at how much has been voted for
that road, and several other roads across the country.
The Special Adviser to President
Muhammadu Buhari on Political Matters, Senator Babafemi Ojudu has
revealed that under previous administrations, a chief or politician who
pays a visit to the Aso Rock Presidential Villa is handed $100,000 or
$50,000 when leaving.
Speaking in an interview with Leadership
newspapers, the presidency official, however, pointed out that his
principal has put a stop to the practice as such cash gifts are now
diverted into productive services and the provision of infrastructure.
In the words of Ojudu, “In the past,
somebody would come to Aso Rock, a chief or a politician. And they
package $100,000, $50,000 for him. The man gets back to his hotel room,
dashes his driver $500, dashes his PA $1,000, his girl friend $200. This
has stopped. Such money must go into productive services, medical
services, infrastructure etc.
“Let’s do something that is enduring for
our people. All these stop gap measures, going as subsidies, we’re
going to stop them. Let’s make our refineries work. Don’t let us make
millionaires of a few and poor people of millions.
“These are the kinds of problems we’re
having now. In the process of change, all these things are bound to
happen. This is one year, but again, this new government never envisaged
things will be this difficult.
“When we were campaigning, oil was still
$112 per barrel. Nobody could have thought it would just crash and
become $33 per barrel. We’re now on $40 per barrel. Nobody envisaged
that our foreign reserve could go as low as $28 billion. We were
importing food. We were importing medication, we were paying school fees
of millions of Nigerians abroad. What the government is doing now is:
let’s take subsidy away from these individuals that are getting it.
Let’s take money off bringing in food,
let’s grow what we’re going to feed on. This is going to take some time;
it’s not something that is going be done overnight. Nigerians will have
to be patient. I can understand. People call me every day that, they
can’t pay school fees, they can’t pay house rent. But again, if we want
Nigeria to grow, if we want sustainable development, we cannot but
breakaway from the past. It is this breaking away from the past, that is
causing the pain we’re going through as a nation.
“What people are saying is just like
saying ‘bring back corruption’. They don’t know what corruption has done
to this country. You vote about a billion naira for a hospital, and
N800 million is taken away by corruption, and you have only N200 million
left. So, there won’t be medication, there won’t be ambulances etc you
can imagine how many people die due to such act. They stash such money
outside the country. They buy houses in America, buy private jets etc.
“Do you know the havoc that corruption
has done to this country over the years? That is why we now have
half-baked graduates. Do you know what corruption has done to our
infrastructure over the years? Look at the Abuja-Lokoja Road. What you
have now is not the original design. Look at how much has been voted for
that road, and several other roads across the country.
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