Site icon GRASSROOTS ONLINE

Obi Charges Buhari To Focus On Reducing Poverty, Not 2023 Elections

Former Anambra State Governor, Peter Obi, has reacted to the economic the turmoil that is currently bedeviling Nigeria. 

The Peoples Democratic Party former Vice Presidential candidate urged the present administration to solve the economic crisis in the country rather than focusing on political permutations.

In a monitored interview on Channels TV by grassroots.ng, Obi said the 2023 elections have no impact on people’s current livelihoods, which has been put in dire circumstances by the coronavirus pandemic.

He also blamed President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration for not adequately preparing the country for the impact of the pandemic.

“Every other country is discussing the recession and how to pull their people out of poverty,” he said. “So what we should do now is to concentrate on the monetary and fiscal policies to start pulling people out of poverty.

“If you see what happened with recent protests, you could see that we are heading into a problem. And I want our energy to be concentrated in that problem. The politicians, the class where I belong, should do more seriously, across party lines, to be able to arrest the situation before it gets out of hand.

“For me, it is in discussing how do we put food on people’s table. Elections will come and we can see how to select the best. But let’s deal with the recession we have just entered before 2023.”

Obi lambasted the current administration over its propensity to borrow for corruption and inability to cut government expenses.

“The cost of governance is not acceptable,” he said. “There is too much waste.

“This recession is going to be worst than in 2016 because the monies we borrowed then were not properly invested.

“What we need now is to go into a vigorous regime of formulating implementable and measurable monetary and fiscal policies to drive ourselves out of the present situation.”

According to Obi, Nigerian leaders now “need to take very difficult decisions” if they are to turn the tide and put the economy back on the track of positive growth.

Exit mobile version