Tinubu comments on the Removal of the Fuel Subsidy
NATIONAL leader of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Bola Tinubu, has appealed to Nigerians to take the difficulties that might arise as a result of the new pump price of fuel as a sacrifice for a better future.
tinubu In a statement issued by his
media office, the two-term governor of Lagos state, commended
President
Muhammadu Buhari for taking “a bold step”, telling Nigerians that “this
pain is necessary”. He said the new development will clear the rot in
the petroleum sector, and push out “fake businessmen who became true
billionaires over night. “We all want fuel at a cheaper price under the
subsidy, we got the right price but not the fuel,” the statement read.
“I would be lying if I said this will cause no pain or dislocation.
However, it will stabilise supply
and end the costs associated with long waits and delays for fuel. The
days and hours of waiting for fuel will be a thing of the past. “As
originally envisioned, subsidy formed a basic part of the social
contract between the people and their government. It was a benefit all
were to enjoy. Yet, because past governments were not for and of the
people, the true meaning and objective of the subsidy policy became
lost.
Over the years, the operation of the
measure was distorted to where it no longer functioned for the benefit
of the masses but for the undue enrichment of a small club of
businessmen, some legitimate in their work, some not. “Instead of
remaining a positive aspect of the social contract, subsidy was
transformed into an opaque haven of intrigue and malfeasance. It was
turned into a shadowy process from which the unscrupulous extracted
large sums of money without providing the services and products duly
paid for.
Fake businessmen became true
billionaires over night as if by supernatural force. They paraded
themselves as such. “To allow this unfairness to continue would have
been a breach of the promise made by this government to the people. We
all have an emotional and sympathetic attachment to the ideals upon
which the subsidy was founded.”
Tinubu said allowing the situation
to remain the same would have translated to a breach of the agreement
which the ruling party had with Nigerians in the electioneering period.
He confessed that though he would have ordinarily preferred that the
sector was sanitised and not totally liberalised, he believed that the
current government took a decision that serves the people best.
“This administration entered office
with a mandate of CHANGE. The government could not forever sit back and
allow this dire inequity to continue, lest it forfeits the essence of
its mandate,” he said.
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