If You Must Succeed, Crack the NNPC Nut, Blair Tells Buhari...
Former British Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, has asked the
incoming President, General Muhammadu Buhari, to overhaul the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, saying it was one sure way of
tackling corruption and saving more money for infrastructural
development.
Blair also asked the leadership of the All Progressives Congress,
APC, to switch from its opposition status and assume the posture of head
of an organisation, stressing that the days of persuasion and
agitations were over.
He further stated that Buhari and the APC must be true to their words
at all times, saying the action of the incoming government within the
first 100 days in office would determine the kind of goodwill it would
eventually have.
Jonathan and Diezani, the ‘oil godess’, Diezani is sister to Jonathan’s concubine/ baby mama and also hails from the Niger Delt
Blair spoke at a two-day policy dialogue themed “Implementing Change:
From Vision to Reality,” organised by the Policy, Research and Strategy
Directorate of the APC Presidential Campaign Council in Abuja,
yesterday.
Represented by Mr. Peter Benjamin Mandelson, a former Secretary of State
for Trade and Industry in Blair’s government, the former prime minister
also asked Buhari to ensure that the revenue of the Federal Government
was kept in a comprehensive account.
He also warned against politics of region especially against the zones seen to have not voted for the APC.
He said: “You, Mr. Vice President-elect and Mr. President-elect,
Buhari, I must say you have the expectations and the ambitions of 173
million Nigerians in your hands. You have the hopes of an entire
continent as well as the eyes of the entire world focused on your
efforts. But I tell you, people are excited about what is about to
happen in Nigeria. They really feel a sense of expectation of faith and
hope.
Diezani Allison, minister of petroleum
What you do in the first 100 days is important and symbolic and can also
have tremendously positive repercussion for the government and
throughout the country. You have a limited window of opportunity to make
an impact as a government. Looking at Nigeria, I would say your
vulnerability is corruption and that is not new to you, particularly
around the oil sector.
People in this country seem to be able to do things with impunity and
beyond the reach of the rule of law or proper accountability and the
judicial system. You can crack the NNPC nut or you can make a start on
it in the first 100 days and if you do so, you would have built a very
strong foundation for what you have to do in the next four years and
beyond.
“I think ensuring that all government revenue goes into a single
government account will be a good start. Those revenues from your
natural resource are so vital for the country and for your future. I
think that will send a very strong message. We did the same thing when
we came in in 1997 when we gave the Bank of England its independence and
that gave us an instant reputation for fiscal prudence.
“It is quite courageous for a government to give power away to
another entity. There were people who voted for the others, mostly in
the south and the east of the country. You need to show the people who
didn’t vote for you that you represent their interest as much as the
people who voted for you.
“This was what we called big tent politics during Tony Blair era. If
Nigeria is to transform and evolve towards a politics of performance, it
is very important to get away from the politics of ethnicity, religion,
politics of patronage and cronyism.”
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