L-R; President Muhammadu Buhari, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Mr Abubakar Malami,Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, Minister of State Agriculture Hon Heineken Lokpobiri, Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma and Minister of State Budget and National Planning, Hajiya Zainab Ahmed as President presides over July 20th 2016 Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting at the State House in Abuja. PHOTO; SUNDAY AGHAEZE |
With the multiple challenges currently being faced by the Federal Government including economic recession, mounting poverty, persistent corruption, higher rate of kidnapping, abuse of IDPs, high rate of unemployment and a reeling manufacturing sector, many people still believe the current administration has what it takes to tackle these problems and is making efforts to do so, while others think the government at the centre cannot cope without an overhaul and greater collaboration with other actors. To you, is the federal government still on the right track towards delivering the gains of development to the citizens of this country?
ABIMBOLA AKOSILE
* Yes, the federal government is
obviously on the right track. All the negative predictions by the West
against Nigeria failed as inflation is being shackled by our humble
economic experts; economic recession is being tackled by indigenous
gurus, even high-profile corruption cases are being prosecuted without
fear or favour. There are expanding employment horizons, stemming
poverty, kidnappers to bag life jail terms, and abusers of IDPs being
prosecuted too irrespective of whose ox is gored; with deliberate
efforts to boost food, energy and manufacturing, and check in insecurity
with honesty and zeal e.t.c. These have all taken Nigeria some good
steps forward. Although the sky is our beginning, we are progressing
appreciably. We must remain focused and determined. God bless Nigeria.
Miss Apeji Patience Eneyeme, Badagry, Lagos
* About the federal government being on
track, my answer is yes and no. Yes, the rank and file of Nigerians have
realised that graft has an underbelly of trouble; it is good. However,
it appears society is stratified in this matter. Do those people
presently in and around power truly accept that corruption isn’t okay?
– Mr. E. Iheanyi Chukwudi, B.A.R. Associates, Apo, Abuja
* It’s a complex question based on one’s
position on the ladder of information. Speaking from a macroeconomic
perspective, NO, very little has been done to remedy Nigeria’s
socio-economic challenges. We still see blatant nepotism, corruption and
incompetence in national leadership. The current leadership at Federal
level still scores well below average in terms of performance. Power
supply is miserable, so are our roads, education, security, trade etc.
The exchange rate has become a reoccurring nightmare. If we benchmark
the Federal government against their electioneering promises, the score
is less than 0.5 per cent. A lot was expected and very little is being
done.
– Mr. Utibe Uko, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State
– Mr. Utibe Uko, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State
* Twenty months after taking over power,
the Buhari-led government, even to the blind, has lost it. In fact, it
has spent most of its precious time chasing enemies, forgetting it has
responsibility to those who believed and voted for him. No capital
project, no electricity after all the (fake) promises, killings
everywhere while the president would wait until he is compelled to show
concern. What about economy? Can we ever recover again?
– Mr. Sunny Okobi, Lagos State
– Mr. Sunny Okobi, Lagos State
* Despite the high hopes raised by the
incumbent administration, Nigerians are yet to experience any
significant development after close to two years of taking over power to
show we are on track.
– Miss Nkeiruka Abanna, Lagos State
– Miss Nkeiruka Abanna, Lagos State
* The Federal Government has done well
to some extent on Boko Haram and corruption, but they need to act more
on the Fulani herdsmen issue, to ensure that peace is maintained by all.
The contemporary case of Southern Kaduna also leaves much to be desired
concerning the beneficiaries of the tax money that was paid, how the
killers get arms, any affiliation with Boko Haram, and why they haven’t
been arrested so far. Let us pray that the 2017 budget will get us out
of recession. PMB’s cabinet needs to be checked and the corrupt ones
dropped or else corruption will fight back.
– Mr. Dogo Stephen, Kaduna
– Mr. Dogo Stephen, Kaduna
* Individually, we can analyse this
administration and draw our conclusions from it, let us put aside big
grammar and be realistic for once, They are part of the elites that led
us right from the independence day to this present time randomly,
without exempting any. What have we achieved as a nation? Please spare
me of this grammar.
– Mr. Adegun Abiodun Mathew, Lagos State
– Mr. Adegun Abiodun Mathew, Lagos State
* The Federal government is indeed still
on the right track. What it needs to succeed is the goodwill of you and
I. God has placed PMB where he is. Our collective goodwill and wishes
for his regime would make negative things positive for us all. So they
need our support to be on the right track.
– Hon. Babale Maiungwa, U/Romi, Kaduna
– Hon. Babale Maiungwa, U/Romi, Kaduna
* Let Nigerians put past events of 2016
behind and believe that this year will be better. All the ugly things
that happened last year will not happen again. I believe there must be
focus in getting out of recession this year; after all oil price is
going up in the international market which is to our advantage due to
the current benchmark of $42 for the 2017 budget. There is hope for
Nigeria if the concerned ministries would manage budget funds very well.
– Mrs. Ijeoma Nnorom, Lagos State
– Mrs. Ijeoma Nnorom, Lagos State
* As far as jobs are not being created
and the level of poverty continues to grow, the gains of development
will continue to be on paper only. Government should look for ways of
creating private-sector jobs.
– Mr. Buga Dunj, Jos, Plateau State
– Mr. Buga Dunj, Jos, Plateau State
* Yes, but these persistent hydra-headed
challenges bedevilling us today need our very best hands, brains and
resources to pull through these endless thorny path we have toiled
through so tortuously too slowly and stressfully. It is quite obvious
that the government at the centre has lost too much grip and therefore
needs genuine help badly. Apart from total overhaul, greater
collaboration with other actors irrespective of party, religion,
ethnicity, tribe, culture, economic status e.t.c. is long overdue. We
must act fast and of course now, as a stitch in time saves nine.
– Mr. Apeji Onesi, Lagos State
* If I have forgotten all the promises
bandied by the APC pre-2015 I can never forget this one: “Giving
Nigerians electricity is not rocket science”. Twenty months down the
line, it appears it’s worse than Astrophysics combined with Molecular
Genetics.
– Mr. John Ogunsemore, Lagos State
* Yes, the federal government is on the
right track, although greater speed and more achievements which are
tangible and visible in the lives of the poor would be very much
welcome. Despite the government’s N5,000 monthly stipend to one million
poor citizens, poverty has not abated. Corruption cases must be
concluded speedily with long jail terms for sacred cows, while some
kidnappers must be actually sentenced and put to death this year, to
help deter others from the lucrative venture. Lastly, the 2017 budget
must the strictly im
– Mr. Olumuyiwa Olorunsomo, Lagos
Source: This Day Newspaper
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