Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, has said President Muhammadu Buhari’s change agenda is real and irreversible, despite the derision of the agenda by those opposed to it.
“To those who have been mocking our change agenda, we say let them continue to entertain themselves, but we remain undaunted because this change is irreversible,” the minister said at the South-East edition of the Federal Government’s Town Hall Meeting in Enugu on Monday.
He said Nigeria had no choice but to embrace change, adding that the country cannot continue to do things the same way and expect a different result.
Mohammed noted that even as change is a process and not an instant coffee, it has begun to manifest in many ways, touching on the war against corruption, accountability in governance and the economy, among others.
“Before now, public officials simply opened the public till, took as much money as they wanted and walked away, without consequences! That explains why funds allocated to the military to fight Boko Haram ended up in the piggy banks of many unscrupulous Nigerians. Today, all those who looted the public treasury are being made to answer for their actions, as impunity gives way to accountability.
“Prior to now, funds accruing to the government were paid into so many accounts that even the government could not keep a tab on them, or worse still did not even know the accounts existed. Today, every kobo accruing to the government is paid into a single account, called the Treasury Singles Account (TSA), to be used for the benefit of all Nigerians.
“Before now, thousand of ghosts earned salaries every month. Of course, we all know that ghosts don’t work, yet they got paid in this country. Today, the ghosts are in trouble as over 30,000 of them have had their unmerited salaries stopped, saving the country millions and millions of naira. Many more ghosts are being smoked out,” he said.
The minister said that emphasis is fast shifting from oil as the administration moves to diversify the economy away from the product, disclosing that in June 2016, for the very first time, about 70 per cent of the over N500billion raised from the Federal Accounts Allocation Committee came from non-oil sector, while 30 per cent came from the oil sector.
He said before the advent of the present administration, many key roads across the country were abandoned, even when funds were budgeted for them, causing untold hardship for the people.
“Now, construction firms have been mobilised to sites across the country. As they move to site, they are creating thousands of new jobs. No part of the country is left out of this,” the Minister added, listing at least seven key roads in the South-East that have benefitted from the mobilisation of contractors.
He thanked Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu for his immense contribution to the success of the Town Hall Meeting, the fifth in a series that started in Lagos on April 25, 2016, saying the governor has shown that the development of the country transcends party affiliation and other divisive considerations.
Ministers of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige; Foreign Affairs, Mr. Geoffrey Onyeama; Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh; Industry, Trade and Investment, Mr. Okechukwu Enelamah; Health, Prof. Isaac Adewale; Minister of State for Petroleum, Mr. Ibe Kachikwu, and Minister of State for Environment, Mallam Ibrahim Usman Jibril, also attended the Town Hall Meeting.