• Alleges poor consultation on AfCFTA, fiscal indiscipline • Nigeria’s renegotiation delaying ratification, says official • Russia seeks more commitment to raise deals above $20b
Former
President Olusegun Obasanjo has lamented that nepotism in Nigeria is
obstructing the fight against corruption.In what seemed like reporting
the country’s leadership to the world, the elder statesman, before a
gathering of investors at the ongoing yearly meeting of the African
Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) in Moscow, accused the administration
of President Muhammadu Buhari of fiscal indiscipline and bias in the
fight against corruption.
He described corruption and development
as strange bed fellows, warning that people in authority would remain
deluded as long as their definition of corruption is when money, goods
and services are involved.
“Nepotism is a form of corruption and
condoning what is bad is a height of corruption. Lack of fiscal
discipline is corruption. So, corruption and development cannot meet.
You must eschew corruption to make sure that you make significant
progress.
“Fighting corruption is not a matter of do it today and
tomorrow you are absent. It must be consistently fought. There must not
be sacred cows, and it must be comprehensive and inclusive,” he
said.The Buhari administration has repeatedly come under criticism for
allegedly favouring a section of the country on appointments and
targeting the opposition in its campaign against graft.
The
government’s alleged shoddy consultation was also blamed for the delay
in the ratification of the African Continental Free Trade and Agreement
(AfCFTA), acclaimed the largest free trade agreement in the world.
Obasanjo told investors that while there is no confusion on what the
deal is, private sector operators became disillusioned over the
government’s alleged inaction and poor consultations after it had taken
the lead in design and execution.
He expressed hope that Nigeria
would sign the deal before the July 7 launch in Niamey.“Nigeria will not
be absent at the launch of the AfCFTA. But I see no reason why Nigeria
can be present at the launch when it has not signed the agreement. It is
out of place. Eritrea and even Niger and Benin who are our neighbours
have signed, and Nigeria is counting itself out.
“If you heard
the statement of the permanent secretary in the Ministry of Trade today,
there is nothing more beautiful than that, but he is not a policy
maker, he is a policy executor.
“He will have to go home and tell
the policymakers that he made the right statement, so it’s now their
turn for action. I hope that when he gets home and says it’s time for
right action, they will follow through,” he said.
But Gabriel
Aduda, Permanent Secretary (Political and Economic Affairs) at the
Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, said the
delay was not indicative of government’s doubt on the initiative, but
the consequence of ongoing renegotiations.He explained that Nigeria
wants to ensure that some protective steps are put in place, lest the
country becomes a dumping ground.
“With time, Nigeria is going to
sign. But we have to do what China did, even with the world trade
agreement – they gave a condition. And that is what we are going to do.
You do not expect a country like Nigeria to be given the same size of
cake with a country like The Gambia, even though we are all in Africa.
“You
cannot just go ahead and enter into an agreement with a neighbouring
nation without looking at who is standing behind that nation. How are
you going to protect yourself?
“Though we need a free and fair
deal, how also do we protect ourselves to ensure that we do not just
become a dumping ground? These are some of the issues we are looking at,
at the moment. Absolutely, we are coming back to the table to say,
“this is what we want,” Aduda said.
Earlier, Sergey Lavrov,
Russia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, expressed his country’s
willingness to contribute more to the development of the African
continent, disclosing that over $20 billion worth of investments was
done in Africa in 2018.
“Russia is building a long-term
relationship with Africa and has become a shareholder in Afreximbank. To
give an additional impetus to all our cooperation, including commercial
and economic, it was decided to jointly organise the first
Russia-Africa summit in October 2019 in Sochi.
“We are waiting
for African Heads of State and Government, leaders of the African Union
and other major sub-regional organisations to key into our partnership
and hope that Afreximbank will contribute to the substantial content of
the economic part of the programme, which seems very solid,” he said.
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