The Presidency has advised politicians against politicising the fight against the coronavirus.
Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Garba Shehu, stated this in a statement on Friday.
Shehu was responding to allegations raised by Senator Ali Ndume from Borno, in which he accused some unnamed government officials of wrongdoing in the performance of their official duties.
Shehu, however, advised that at this difficult time of the battle by Nigeria against coronavirus, everyone should help the fight and not seek to make political capital out of it, whatever his or her grievances.
He said: “When he was first elected President in 2015, President Muhammadu Buhari said that he belonged to everybody and belonged to nobody. What was true then remains true today.
“He believes in public service, as a servant of the people – and he expects the exact same commitment from members of his government and, of course, his closest aides.
“The President has made it clear times without number that anyone who will not, cannot, or does not pull his weight – nor meet these exacting standards – is not welcome in his administration. A number of ranking officials have been shown the way out at various times simply on account of this.
“Similarly, he believes in loyalty and truthfulness. Should any individuals be found to be serving themselves and not the people, then it is right and proper to call them out. But this must be done on the basis of evidence and proof – not on conjecture.
“It is therefore disappointing to hear a politician call out unnamed individuals in the administration and accuse them of unnamed transgressions.
“If this politician has evidence – then he should make public their identities as well as his proof. Innuendo is not proof.”
Shehu added that simply claiming that the COVID-19 Palliative Measures Committee was not functioning as it should was not the same as presenting proof.
“No one replaces an institutional government body in the midst of the global pandemic without clear and irrefutable evidence that it needs replacing.
“A news briefing from a discontented politician is rarely the source of such evidence,” he said.