#Endbadgovernance protest speech: Let’s fact-check Tinubu
Nigeria has been on
tenterhooks in the last one week since the commencement of #EndBadGovernance
(or anti-hunger) protests on August 1, 2024. What started as a child’s play has
resulted in humongous economic and social costs to the country. While the demonstrations
were largely peaceful in the 17 states in southern Nigeria, it was bloody in
many parts of the North. Fatalities were recorded in states like Niger, Borno,
Kano, Jigawa and Kaduna. Some of the state governors have to declare curfew (in
part or wholly) in order to stem the wanton destruction of public facilities
and private property. Most shocking is the call for military takeover and
hoisting of the Russian flag in some cities of northern Nigeria.
In the 34 years I have been
involved in media advocacy, I have been protesting against bad governance
through my commentaries in print and broadcast media. As of the last count,
which was Saturday, August 3, 2024, my views have been expressed in 73 print
media (newspapers, magazines, journals), 60 television stations and 71 radio
stations. As an undergraduate student of the University of Lagos, I fully
participated in aluta on campus and even outside campus, especially during the
annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election. I was also on the street
during the #OccupyNigeria protest of 2012.
I quite understand the
utilitarian value of the critical mass of people demanding change and a better
life. I therefore support the #EndBadGovernance protest in principle with a
proviso that it will be peaceful and without bloodletting. Unfortunately, the
turn of events has shown that while the organisers may be clear-headed about
demanding better governance, fifth columnists have infiltrated their rank to
cash in on the movement for pecuniary and political interest.
Many call out President Bola
Tinubu to douse the rising tension by addressing the nation on the demands for
better governance. The President obliged last Sunday morning. In a 20-minute
speech of 38 paragraphs, the President articulated the economic reforms his
government had embarked upon in the last 14 months. Sincerely, Tinubu’s speech
since he assumed office as the 16th President of Nigeria never contained the
kind of statistics his August 4, 2024 broadcast contained. The President spoke
to issues around youth empowerment, agricultural initiatives meant to bring
down the rising cost of food, gas initiatives, especially the plan to make
Nigeria adopt compressed natural gas as the new fuel for transportation. Tinubu
also spoke on infrastructural development in terms of roads and housing, the
new minimum wage for Nigerian workers, the consumer credit scheme, the student
loans scheme, credit support to nano, micro, small, and medium enterprises and
many more.
Although many, including the
organisers of the protest, did not agree with him, Tinubu said, “For decades,
our economy has remained anaemic and taken a dip because of many misalignments
that have stunted our growth. Just over a year ago, our dear country, Nigeria,
reached a point where we couldn’t afford to continue the use of temporary
solutions to solve long-term problems for the sake of now and our unborn
generations. I, therefore, took the painful yet necessary decision to remove
fuel subsidies and abolish multiple foreign exchange systems which had
constituted a noose around the economic jugular of our nation and impeded our
economic development and progress.” One of the demands of the protesters is for
Tinubu to return the fuel price to the subsidy era before his inauguration. In
all honesty, I don’t think this is feasible, given the economic dislocation
this will cost. However, I believe if the Port Harcourt refinery and other
private refineries such as the Dangote refinery are functioning, and we exit
fuel importation, the price of refined petroleum products will come down
significantly.
The President said further
that “in the past 14 months, our government has made significant strides in
rebuilding the foundation of our economy to carry us into a future of plenty
and abundance. On the fiscal side, aggregate government revenues have more than
doubled, hitting over N9.1 trillion in the first half of 2024 compared to the
first half of 2023 due to our efforts at blocking leakages, introducing
automation, and mobilising funding creatively without additional burden on the
people. Productivity is gradually increasing in the non-oil sector, reaching
new levels and taking advantage of the opportunities in the current economic
ambience….. Coming from a place where our country spent 97 per cent of all our
revenue on debt service; we have been able to reduce that to 68 per cent in the
last 13 months. We have also cleared legitimate outstanding foreign exchange
obligations of about $5 billion without any adverse impact on our programmes.”
Tinubu said in July 2024, oil
production increased to 1.61 million barrels per day, and the nation’s gas
assets were receiving the deserved attention. Investors are coming back, and
Nigeria has already seen two Foreign Direct Investments signed amounting to
over half a billion dollars since then. On the CNG, he opined that he had
launched the Compressed Natural Gas Initiative to power the country’s
transportation economy and bring costs down. This will save over N 2 trillion a
month, being used to import PMS and AGO and free up our resources for more
investment in healthcare and education. He said his government would be
distributing a million kits of extremely low or at no cost to commercial
vehicles that transport people and goods and who currently consume 80 per cent of
the imported PMS and AGO. He claimed that his government has started the
distribution of conversion kits and the setting up of conversion centres across
the country in conjunction with the private sector. He believes that this CNG
initiative will reduce transportation costs by approximately 60 per cent and
help to curb inflation.
Under the Students Loan
Scheme, he said N45.6bn had already been processed for payment to students and
their respective institutions. He said he established the Consumer Credit
Corporation with over N200bn to help Nigerians acquire essential products
without the need for immediate cash payments. The president said he ordered the
release of an additional N50bn each for NELFUND – the student loan, and Credit
Corporation from the proceeds of crimes recovered by the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission.
Tinubu further said he secured
$620 million under the Digital and Creative Enterprises– a programme to empower
young people, creating millions of information technology and technical jobs
that would make them globally competitive. These programmes include the
3Million Technical Talents scheme. In
addition, his government has introduced the Skill-Up Artisans Programme; the
Nigerian Youth Academy; and the National Youth Talent Export Programme.
Tinubu claimed that more than
N570bn had been released to the 36 states to expand livelihood support to their
citizens, while 600,000 nano-businesses had benefitted from nano-grants. An
additional 400,000 nano-businesses are expected to benefit. Furthermore, 75,000
beneficiaries have been processed to receive our N1 million Micro and Small
Business single-digit interest loans, starting this month. His government has
also built 10 MSME hubs within the past year, created 240,000 jobs through them
and five more hubs are in progress which will be ready by October this year.
Payments of N1bn each are also being made to large manufacturers under
single-digit loans to boost manufacturing output and stimulate growth. Under
his Renewed Hope City and Estates, he is committed to 100,000 housing units
over the next three years.
Lastly, the president says he
is providing incentives to farmers to increase food production at affordable
prices. He claimed to have directed that tariffs and other import duties should
be removed on rice, wheat, maize, sorghum, drugs, and other pharmaceutical and
medical supplies for the next six months, in the first instance, to help drive
down the prices. The president said his government’s target was to cultivate
more than 10 million hectares of land to grow what we eat. The Federal
Government will provide all necessary incentives for this initiative, whilst
the states provide the land. He said he had ordered mechanised farming
equipment such as tractors and planters, worth billions of naira from the United
States, Belarus, and Brazil.
All the aforementioned
initiatives are quite ambitious and will rub off positively on the economy. If
genuinely implemented, they will boost employment, alleviate poverty and reduce
hunger. My appeal is for civil society organisations and the media to either
jointly or separately set up technical committees that will track the
performance of the government on these counts. Developing a monitoring and
evaluation matrix with the figures reeled out by the President and carrying out
on-the-spot assessment is a veritable way of fact-checking the President to
know whether he is truthful or lying to the nation.
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