Don’t Blame Us, Governor Tell FG, Say Insecurity Increased Poverty

Don’t Blame Us, Governor Tell FG, Say Insecurity Increased Poverty

 

 

Fawaz Adebisi

 

 

 

The 36 state governors have denied the claim made by the federal government that they are to blame for the widespread poverty in the nation.

 

The governors argued that the Federal Government was solely to blame for the country’s predicament due to what they viewed as its neglect of its responsibilities and failing to reduce poverty among Nigerians in general.

 

The Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) responded to Mr. Clement Agba’s assertion on Wednesday that the governors were not doing enough to address poverty and other social issues in their states. Mr. Agba is the Minister of State for Budget and National Planning.

 

 

The NGF said in a statement released through its spokesperson, AbdulRazaque Bello-Barkindo, that the state government’s efforts to improve living conditions for the populace had been negatively impacted by Nigeria’s ongoing security crisis.

 

 

 

The forum said while it acknowledged that it is the primary duty of any government to ensure the security of lives and property, “ the Federal Government which is responsible for the security of lives and property has been unable to fulfill this covenant with the people thus allowing bandits, insurgents, and kidnappers to turn the country into a killing field, maiming and abducting people, in schools market squares and even on their farmlands.”

 

 

 

It added: “This dereliction of duty from the center is the main reason why people have been unable to engage in regular agrarian activity and in commerce.

 

“Today, rural areas are insecure, markets are unsafe, surety of travels is improbable and life for the common people generally is harsh and brutish.

 

 

“The question is, how can a defenseless rural population maintain a sustainable lifestyle of peace and harmony when their lives are cut prematurely, and they wallow permanently in danger?

 

“How does a minister whose government has been unable to ensure security, law and order have the temerity to blame governors?”

 

The governors argued that the ‘unwarranted attack’ by Agba was meant to shift attention from the failure of the Federal Government.

 

He said: “The Minister got his message totally wrong. His attacks are not only unnecessary, but they represent a brazen descent into selective amnesia. It is also diversionary as far as the governors are concerned.

 

 

“The Minister who should be responding to a question demanding to know what he and his colleague, the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, were doing to ameliorate the hardship Nigerians are facing attempted to defray the notion that rising levels of hunger and lack were peculiar to Nigeria.

 

“True as that may be, Mr. Agba went further to explain that their government, through many of its social security programmes, has been dedicating resources to alleviating hardship, and then goes further to accuse state governors of misdirecting resources to projects that have no impact on the people.

 

“While rightly pointing out that 72% of the poverty in Nigeria is found in the rural areas, the Minister said that the rural populace had been abandoned by governors.

 

“This assertion is not only preposterous and without any empirical basis, but also very far from the truth. It is Mr. Clement Agba’s veiled and deliberate effort, as a minister, to protect his paymasters and politicize very critical issues of national importance.

 

“Instead of answering the question thrown at him by journalists, Mr. Agba veered his attention to soft targets that happen to be 36 governors.

 

 

“Two states, Edo State and Akwa Ibom State had promptly responded to the vituperations of the Minister.

 

“According to Akwa Ibom State, what determines poverty and unemployment in a country is its economic policy, which is set, normally by the central government nationally.

 

“Akwa Ibom insists that the Federal Government cannot abdicate its responsibility by blaming states and goes further to ask, albeit rhetorically, how economic policies in a state drive the dollar which determines almost every aspect of our national existence.

 

“In its response to Clement Agba, Edo State, on the other hand, reeled out the projects the state embarked upon which were targeted at alleviating poverty among its people.

 

Mr. Agba is perceptibly oblivious of them.

 

“Many other states have been implementing pro-poor programs in their domain, and they are there for all to see.

 

“Although the Minister committed the folly of tarring all thirty-six governors with the same brush, there cannot be a one-size-fits-all reply to the Minister’s misguided outburst.

 

“For example, it is the Federal Government that, in its campaign message in 2019, promised to take 100 million Nigerians out of poverty.

 

“Today, records show that more than 130 million Nigerians are living below the globally accepted poverty line of a dollar a day.

 

“Under the current administration that Mr. Clement Agba is minister, the national cash cow, the NNPC, had failed to remit statutory allocations to states in several months.

 

“The situation had compelled governors to rely on other sources of revenue like, the SFTAS program and other interventions anchored by the NGF, to fund states activities while monies budgeted for such federal ministries as Agriculture, Rural Development and Humanitarian Affairs are not being deployed in the direction of the people.

 

“So, where is the Minister getting his unverified facts and figures from? It is important to mention here that only this week the House of Representatives asked the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Hajiya Sadiya Umar Farouk, to quit office if she was not ready to do her work of alleviating poverty in the land.

 

“This, in other words, is a resounding vote of no confidence on the ministers among whom Mr. Agba serves.

 

“The Nigeria Governors’ Forum would like to state categorically that it does not indulge in joining issues with the Federal Executive Council, being a non-partisan organ.

 

“NGF’s primary mandate is to partner with all well-meaning institutions, concerns, MDAs, and individuals for the progress of the Nigerian people.

 

“However, it is important to put on record the progress made by state governors in the administration of their states, which have witnessed tremendous progress in recent time.

 

“Governors have undertaken projects where they, in conjunction with their people, deem them fit for purpose.

 

“Governors have today shown greater responsiveness to the yearnings and aspirations of their people, and these vary from one state to another.

 

“The opinion, therefore, of one minister, based on a survey of 56 000 households in a country of 200million people can never diminish the good work that 36 pro-poor minded Governors are doing for this country.

 

“Finally, it is important to admonish top government functionaries like Mr. Clement Agba that the Nigerian people deserve answers from even those who are appointed to serve them and these finger-pointing invectives on soft targets do not help matters, only answers do.”

 

“Our governors now competing to build flyovers all over the place and we applaud them, they should concentrate on building rural roads so that the farmer can at least get their products to the market,” said Agba, who spoke to reporters at the conclusion of the most recent Federal Executive Council meeting in Abuja.

 

He also said, “You find that if they do that and with the new policy in the national development plan that talks about taking power to the rural areas, especially of out-grid power that can easily be put, you begin to attract industries to those areas for value addition.

 

“Poverty, as we know, has different indices, different intensity, and different causes. And it is, for this reason, I went around the 109 senatorial districts in Nigeria, to carry out those surveys and to be able to say specifically, where this hardship is.

 

“The result clearly shows that 72 percent of poverty is in rural areas. It also showed clearly that Sokoto State is leading in poverty with 91 percent. But the surprising thing is Bayelsa being the second in terms of poverty rating in the country. So you see the issue is not about the availability of money. But it has to do with the application of money.”

 

President Muhammadu Buhari claimed certain governors were impeding grassroots development by stealing money allotted to local governments twenty-four hours following Agba’s statement.

 

Governors Nyesom Wike (Rivers) and Samuel Ortom (Benue) pressed him for the names of the affected governors notwithstanding his refusal.

editor

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *