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Sanusi: Nigeria is in Deeper Hole Than it Was in 2015
Former Emir of Kano and the Khalifa of the Tijanniyah Sufi Order of Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi yesterday expressed concern about the current state of the Nigerian economy, saying the country is presently in a deeper hole and a bigger mess than it was in 2015.
He also warned that 2023 may be worse, compared to what the country experienced in 2015.
Sanusi , who was a former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria criticised the current administration, saying in spite of the current mess they were expecting to be rewarded with appreciation after leaving office.
Sanusi spoke at the Akinjide Adeosun Foundation (AAF), Leadership Colloquium and Awards, Chapter 7, with the theme ‘Are Good Leaders Scarce in Nigeria’?
The foundation is a non-profit organisation focussed on charity in the spheres of free, qualitative education and free, qualitative medical outreach.
Yesterday’s event was its seventh which also marked the birthday of its founder, Pharmacist Akinjide Adeosun, husband of Pharmacist Olubamiwo Adeosun, the Secretary to the State Government, SSG, Oyo State.
Speaking as the Special Guest of Honour, at the event which took place in Lagos, Sanusi lamented that “the levels of poverty, levels of insecurity, the rate of inflation, the unstable exchange rate, the lack of power” should worry anybody.
Continuing, he said: “This is the only oil-producing country that is grieving at the moment when oil prices have gone up as a result of the Russia/Ukraine war. Our total revenue is not able to service our debt…. And if anybody does not understand that we are in a complete mess, we are.
“We were in a deep hole in 2015. And between 2015 and now, we have been digging ourselves into a deeper hole.
“We thought we had a big problem in 2015. 2015 is nothing, compared to what will happen in 2023. We have terrorism, we have banditry, we have inflation, we have unstable exchange rate, and the worst thing is that those in leadership actually think we are going to thank them when they leave office.
“That we are going to appreciate them. There is no change. There is no sense of urgency. If you are running a company and your sales revenue cannot pay interest, you know you’re bankrupt
“When the total revenue of the federal government cannot service debt? And we are smiling. These are the kinds of questions we need to ask. And the reality is that there are so many Nigerians, who, given the opportunity will do well but they simply cannot contest in that space…”
Sanusi hinged the reason for Nigeria’s challenges on lack of vision by some of the leaders.
“What is our vision for Nigeria? Do we have a vision of one country? Do we have a vision of one united country, that lives peacefully with itself – diverse, multicultural, multi-religious but one? And these things are not self-contradictory. Where did we get it wrong?”
He answered the question himself. “Leaders after leaders, most of those who have ruled did not have a vision for a united Nigeria. How would you like to be remembered after eight years as a President, after eight years as a governor, eight years as a minister, eight years as Governor of CBN?
“How would you like history to remember you? They have not thought about it. The vast majority of those in office have a vision that is limited to the next election. It is to win. And when you’ve won, you’ve reached a destination, not a journey.”
He told his audience that the vision of General Yakubu Gowon cascaded down. He used his days at Kings College and the type of bonding that existed between and among students of different tribes and religions as an example of a vision for unity, explaining that 90% of his friends are from other tribes and they are in Lagos. He wondered why the framework and mindset of unity remains missing in the country.”
In a veiled reference to the raging controversy over a Muslim/Muslim ticket, he said: “We are going into an election, what are we talking about? North and South, Muslim and Christian? Is that really what we are concerned about? Does it matter if you have a government made up of 100 per cent incompetent Muslims or 100 per cent incompetent Christians? Will that government work?
” Yes we must think of diversity and we must begin to think of fairness in this country and balance, not create any tensions.
“How many people can go to a political party and bring out tens of millions of dollars to pay delegates? Where are you going to get the money and when you get the money, assuming you raise it from people, how are you going to look at the people when you are in office and do the right thing.
“You’re already finished; you’ve already sold your conscience to get there. Or when a nation is ready to sell itself; when the poor people on the streets are ready to be given N5000, N2000, and cast a vote for N2000 today and give up education, give up healthcare and give up security for the next four years? Then, maybe we understand what Chief Awolowo meant when he said a nation gets the leadership it deserves. We, as Nigerians, need to ask these questions.
“People say to me, ‘why do you keep criticizing people? Why do you keep talking about public policy?’ And I say I was a public officer and I have a record – talk about my own record. I met inflation at 15.6 per cent , left it at 7.8 per cent. I stabilised the exchange rate; I saved the banks.
” I transformed the payment system. I have my record. And because I had the opportunity to serve I served and I left a record, so, I’ve earned the right to criticise any public officer who is incompetent and I’ll call him out. And I think we need to start calling out incompetence.”