Onward Nigeria

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Onward Nigeria

Onward Nigeria

@OnwardNG

I am Nigerian! |News•Marketing Communications•|PR|

[email protected] Katılım Temmuz 2010
95 Takip Edilen81K Takipçiler
Onward Nigeria
Onward Nigeria@OnwardNG·
@dipoaina1 @atiku Dear Aina, dont look any further for why Atiku was tainted with contrived corruption allegation; it was all about the Third Term which he led its opposition. Hear the former Senate President Senator Adolphus Wabara revelation that he was offered N250 million cash for 3rd Term
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Ainà Dipo 🇳🇬
Ainà Dipo 🇳🇬@dipoaina1·
President Obasanjo who’s your boss wrote in his book with proven facts that you’re the most corrupt Vice President ever in Africa. So how do you intend to fight corruption given that you’ve already planned to sell most part of Nigeria to your friends and cronies? 😭🙂‍↔️🙂‍↔️ "First, tackling corruption. Fighting corruption should have commenced with the repositioning of the NNPCL, which is a huge beneficiary of the status quo. Its commitment to reform and capacity to implement and enforce reforms is suspect. The subsidy regime has provided an avenue for rent seeking, and the NNPCL and its guardians will be threatened by reforms."
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Atiku Abubakar
Atiku Abubakar@atiku·
What We Would Have Done Differently I've been inundated with inquiries of what I would have done differently if I were at the helm of affairs of our country. I am not the president, Tinubu is. The focus should be on him and not on me or any other. I believe that such inquiries distract from the critical questions of what President Bola Tinubu needs to do to save Nigerians from the excruciating pains arising from his trial-and-error economic policies. However, I understand and appreciate the challenges faced by citizens in seeking alternatives to what is not working for them. I hope Tinubu and members of his administration are humble enough to borrow one or two things from our ideas in the interest of the Nigerian people. I would now go ahead and articulate some of our ideas that would have had the potential to transform our beloved country. IN GENERAL We would have planned better and more robustly: My journey of reforms would have benefited from more adequate preparations; more sufficient diagnostic assessment of the country’s conditions; more consultations with key stakeholders; and better ideas for the final destination. We would have been guided by my robust reform agenda as encapsulated in 'My Covenant With Nigerians', my policy document that sought to, among others, protect our fragile economy against much deeper crisis by preventing business collapse; our document had spelt out policies that were consistent and coherent. We would have sequenced my reforms to achieve fiscal and monetary congruence. Unleashing reforms to determine an appropriate exchange rate, cost-reflective electricity tariff, and PMS price at one and the same time is certainly an overkill. Add CBN’s bullish money tightening spree. As importers of PMS and other petroleum products, removing subsidy on these products without a stable exchange rate would be counterproductive. We would have been more strategic in our response to reform fallout. We would not over-estimate the efficacy of the reform measures or underestimate the potential costs of reforms. I would recognise that reforms could sometimes fail. I would not underestimate the numerous delivery challenges, including the weaknesses of our institutions, and would work assiduously to correct the same. I would, as a responsible leader, pause, reflect, and where necessary, review implementation. I would have led by example. Any fiscal reform to improve liquidity and the management of our fiscal resources must first eliminate revenue leakages arising from governance, including the cost of running the government and the government procurement process. I (and members of my team) would not have lived in luxury while the citizens wallow in misery. We would have communicated more effectively with the people, with civility, tact, and diplomacy. Transparent communication with the public is essential to build public trust, which in turn is important to ensure that the public understands what the government is doing. We would have consulted more with all stakeholders to learn, negotiate, adapt, and modify, among other policy goals. We would have demonstrated more empathy. My Reforms would wear a human face. We would have been more strategic in the design and implementation of reform fallout mitigating measures. I would not run a ‘palliative economy’ yet, we would have robust social protection programme that will offer genuine support to the poor and vulnerable and provide immediate comfort and security to enable them to navigate the stormy seas. SPECIFIC MEASURES We would have undertaken extensive reforms of the public sector institutions to maximize reform impact. We would have placed special focus on security viz: •Commenced on day one, the reform of security institutions with improved funding, and enhanced welfare. My Policy Document had spelt out a Special Presidential Welfare Initiative for security personnel that we would implement
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Onward Nigeria
Onward Nigeria@OnwardNG·
@xm_muva The profile says “feminist”, so it’s obvious. Degenerate!
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Onward Nigeria
Onward Nigeria@OnwardNG·
The Beefeater Escape is Coming to Lagos with a New Gin Unveiling | Get the Scoop here dlvr.it/SvvKg4
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