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An official of former Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan’s
administration said current President Muhammadu Buhari lied about
inheriting a “virtually empty” treasury from the previous government.
Abubakar Olanrewaju Sulaiman, former deputy chairman of the National
Planning Commission, said Jonathan left behind 5.97 trillion naira
(about $30 billion), according to Nigerian newspaper the Daily Post.
Buhari and his ruling All Progressives Congress party have accused previous administrations of corruption and burying Nigeria under millions of dollars of debt. Ahmed Joda, chairman of Buhari's transition committee, also said
the country was “in a state of collapse” because Jonathan’s government
had left behind a deficit of at least 7 trillion naira ($35.2 billion).
But Sulaiman called the claims “unscientific and unfair,” asserting that
Jonathan left behind plenty of funds, the Daily Post reported.
“Under Jonathan, Nigeria became the largest Africa economy
and the 26th in the world amidst deadly security challenges and
dwindling international prices of oil,” the ex-minister said in a
statement Tuesday in Abuja, the capital. “It will be misleading
therefore for our respected President Muhammadu Buhari and indeed the
ruling APC to claim to have met an empty treasury.”
Buhari, who was inaugurated May 29, was quoted by local
media this week as saying his administration took office “with [the]
treasury virtually empty, with debts in millions of dollars, with state
workers and even federal workers not paid their salaries.” Nigeria is
Africa’s richest and most populous nation as well as the largest oil
producer on the continent. But the oil-dependent country has suffered
from the falling price of oil. Nigerian lawmakers have called
for a bailout to cover months of unpaid government salaries in several
states, where some employees have not been paid for as long as 10
months.
“It is such a disgrace for Nigeria,” Buhari told the media in Abuja Monday, according to Vanguard.
Jonathan’s Peoples Democratic Party accused Buhari’s
administration of misrepresenting facts and misleading Nigerians to
believe that Jonathan’s government had accumulated the total federal
debt when a greater chunk of it was inherited, PDP spokesman Olisa Metuh
said in a May 25 statement obtained by the Premium Times newspaper.
Sulaiman said Buhari’s administration has no proof to back
up its claims of a penniless treasury. “[The] government can’t tell us
there is no Excess Crude Account, Sovereign Wealth Fund or are we saying
the Federal Inland Revenue Service and related agencies had not in the
last month been generating revenue?” the ex-minister said Tuesday,
according to the Daily Post. “Until they are able to prove they had no
receipts from these government agencies in the last one month before
Nigerians can now buy into Mr. President’s claims of an empty treasury."
Sulaiman also said Jonathan’s administration handled federal
funds responsibly and never owed salaries to its workers. For
perspective, the ex-minister drew comparisons to the United States,
which is the tenth-biggest debtor nation in the world.
“Money made by the government is meant to be spent, and this
the immediate past administration did responsibly. Every government,
even in the so-called Western world, including the U.S., which today
remains one of the largest debtor nations in the world, operates on
deficit,” Sulaiman said, according to the Daily Post. “Is it on record
that President Obama inherited $3 trillion debt, a collapsed banking
sector and mortgage industry, yet he never raised any alarm. None of
these has happened in Nigeria under Jonathan.”

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