President
Muhammadu Buhari
|
President Muhammadu
Buhari has faulted criticism that his administration is slow. He said government is
only trying to be cautious with a view to avoiding mistakes. “People say we are
slow. We are trying to change structures put in place by our predecessors in
office for 16 years,” Buhari said in Abuja in response to a goodwill
message delivered to him by a group, Women In Politics Forum (WIPF)
The Nation report continues:
“If
we hurry it, we will make mistakes. That will be a disaster,” he said.
President
Buhari described the 2016 budget proposals as a reassuring for employment and
manufacturing.
His
words:”By the end of the second quarter,the full impact of these positive
measures will be felt.”
He
also announced that a committee to rehabilitate infrastructure and
resettle Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in the North-East will soon
be inaugurated.
The
committee, to be led by former Defence Minister, Lt.-Gen Theophilus Yakubu
Danjuma (rtd) will also include Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote.
Buhari’s Senior
Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, said the President
confirmed that all forms of assistance and aid generated locally and
internationally would be channelled through the committee when it is
inaugurated.
The
President has already compiled a list of damaged infrastructure, including
schools and bridges which he has handed to the G7 and the United
States both of which have promised to assist.
The
President added: “I didn’t ask for a Kobo (in cash). It is up to them to choose
what they will undertake. Already,some of them have sent teams to verify our
assertions.”
President
Buhari decried the impact of the Boko Haram violence on women and children
declaring that they are the worst victims of the sect.
He
said: “In the North-East, what I saw for myself and on those clips is a source
of concern for people with conscience. They are mostly women and children who
are orphaned. Some of them don’t even know where they come from. This is the pathetic
situation in which the country has found itself.”
He
said that the fight for the return of the Chibok girls is ongoing and
“continues to be a most worrying issue” to his government, emphasizing that the
administration will do all within its powers in making the best efforts to
secure their freedom.
The
President acknowledged the case made by the WIPF for better representation of
women in his government and assured that women would fare well in the
composition of parastatals and their boards in the first quarter of this year.
The
WIPF, made up of women leaders from 26 registered political parties led by
Barrister Ebere Ifendu of the Labour Party expressed their full support for the
government’s war on corruption and insecurity.
They asked the administration
to usher in laws to promote gender equity as well as action towards the
implementation of the Violence Against Persons Prohibition Act.
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