President Muhammadu Buhari is under
pressure from some highly-placed Nigerians to slow down his anti-graft
war, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said yesterday.
But the government will not pull the brakes because fighting corruption is what Nigerians want, the Vice President said.
Prof. Osinbajo spoke during a meeting with a delegation from the Moslem Congress of Nigeria at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
A statement by his Senior Special
Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, said the Vice President
noted that the government had been getting regular messages from some
Nigerian elites urging it to take it easy.
“We get regular messages from some Nigerian elites saying ‘cool down’.
“It is a very strange morality, that
some of those people have, very complicated but cutting across all
tribes and religious differences,” he said.
He, however, observed that the masses of the Nigerian people have a clearer understanding of right and wrong.
“The masses don’t have that problem,” he said
According to him, a new tribe of
Nigerians who would not compromise their values but would maintain a
sense of right and wrong is now emerging.
“The man on the street is very clear, so
whatever some of these elites say, we shall keep our focus on the
masses who voted for us,” the Vice President said.
He said it was simply unacceptable that
in the last 16 years, there is not a single federal government completed
road, let alone rail.
Noting that the reason for their failure
was corruption, he said the cost of projects were often inflated as
people entrusted with public trust struggle to enrich themselves at the
expense of the people.
Osinbajo said it was the same inordinate
desire for enrichment that explains why money meant to procure arms
were being distributed among persons at a time when the territorial
integrity of the nation was being attacked.
“The insurgency has gone on for six years because government could not adequately equip the military,” he said
But the Vice President assured Nigerians
that President Muhammadu Buhari will not relent, adding that we have no
other agenda but ”the progress of this country”.
Osinbajo added: “Mr. President and I are
extremely focussed on what we need to do. We will focus on critical
things, infrastructure and social investments.”
The leader of the delegation from the
Moslem Congress of Nigeria, Imam Abdulahi Shuaib expressed readiness to
assist government where necessary.
“We are thankful that our candidates of
choice in the election emerged,” he said, adding that the choice of the
President and the Vice President was made by God during last year’s
presidential election.
The Vice President also received
delegations from the Nigeria Society of Engineers (NSE) and the Facility
for Oil Sector Transparency Reform (FOSTER), a group composed of NGOs
involved in various programmes in the Niger Delta.
Osinbajo praised the engineers and highlighted the importance of the profession in national development.
“There is no question at all that engineers are central to the development of the society,” he noted.
The NSE delegation was led by its President, Mr. Otis Anyaeji.
The Vice President restated the government’s commitment to the development of the Niger Delta.
He praised the group for coming together to develop a common framework to support development in the area.
The group, which said it adopted a common framework to avoid duplication, was led by Mr. Richard Oshowole.
Many officials of the Goodluck Jonathan
government are either being probed for alleged corrupt acts or being
tried after being arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC).
The $2.1billion arms cash which some
government officials allegedly shared as campaign fund and the alleged
fraud in arms procurement are top on the ongoing probe.
Former National Security Adviser (NSA)
Col. Sambo Dasuki is at the centre of the alleged fraud. He is standing
trial for money laundering and criminal breach of the law.
Yesterday, a former aide to former Vice
President Namadi Sambo, Mallam Abba Dabo, told the court in Abuja that
he collected N25million from Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Publicity
Secretary Olisa Metuh’s firm – Destra – to undertake a publicity job.
But he told the court that he surrendered the cash to the EFCC when he
discovered that the money came from the office of the National Security
Adviser.
Also yesterday, the government accused
Dasuki of plotting to scuttle his trial before a High Court of the
Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Maitama, Abuja.
Dasuki is being tried with a former
Director of Finance and Administration, Office of the National Security
Adviser, Shuaibu Salisu, a former General Manager, Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Aminu Babakusa and two companies – Acacia
Holdings Limited and Reliance Referral Hospital Limited – on a 19-count
charge.
The accusation is contained in a counter-affidavit filed by the prosecution against an application filed by Dasuki.
The ex-NSA, in the application he filed
last month, accused the EFCC and by extension, the Federal Government,
of breaching his right to prepare for his defence by re-arresting him
after the court granted him bail last December 18.
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