Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed,
has said that given what the Administration of President Muhammadu Buhari
inherited, restructuring could not have been its priority.
The Minister stated this on Thursday when he featured on
“Focus Nigeria” current affairs Programme of African Independent Television
(AIT), anchored by Gbenga Aruleba.
Mohammed explained that with the high level of corruption,
economy downturn, insecurity, particularly with the activities of Boko Haram,
which had taken over half of the North East, the government could not have
contemplated restructuring.
He said the focus of the government which also formed the
basis of its campaign were to fight corruption and insecurity and fix the
economy.
The minister said two years after its inauguration, the
administration had not failed but succeeded on the three campaign promises.
He noted that the division messages and hate speeches raging
presently in the country were not new to government because government had
envisaged it and had been sensitising Nigerians to its dangers.
The minister assured all Nigerians to go about their lawful
businesses and disregard any threat from any quarters.
He said government would not be found wanting in the
discharge of its primary responsibility of protecting lives and property of all
Nigerians wherever they reside.
He added that government would deal decisively with anyone
or group that disturb the peace of the nation and constitute threat to any one
or group.
The minister said that contrary to perception in certain
quarters, the government anti-corruption fight was not one sided or targeted at
opposition.
He said that anywhere there was anti-corruption fight,
corruption would fight back and the tensions being experienced in the country
could be linked to it.
He said before the government took over corruption was so
alarming that 55 persons stole N1.35 trillion in seven years.
Mohammed disclosed that N700 billion was appropriated and
released to Ministry of Niger Delta only between 2009 and 2015 for road
construction.
He said from record made available, N453 billion were paid
to contractors, who did not do up eight per cent of the construction works
given to them.
The minister said the record also showed that the contracts
were over inflated to the level that a kilometre of road was awarded for
between N300 million to N1.2 billion.
He said such was the level of corruption that the previous
administration left N1.7 trillion debts owed to local contractors.
Mohammed said that beyond cleaning the mess left by the
precious administration, the government had been spending massively on
infrastructure particularly roads, railways and power.
He said the government in the last two years had constructed
369 kilometres of roads, empowered 542 local contractors and created 17,000
direct jobs and 50,000 indirect jobs.
On the attitude of the judiciary to the anti-corruption
fight of government the minister said that the entire justice system of the
country needed overhaul to ensure prompt and effective prosecution.
The minister solicited the support of every Nigerians, the
judiciary and the lawyers and judges in particular for the success of
anti-corruption fight.
On power, the minister said that the government did not know
the enormity of the flaws in the privatisation process of the sector by the
previous administration.
He said the process was so corruptly done that the so called
investors did not have the capacity in term of finance and manpower.
The minister said the option would had been to cancel the
entire privatisation process, but for the wrong signal such decision would sent
to the global investment community about the country.
Mohammed said that despite the flaw, the government improved
generation from 2,690 megawatts it inherited to 5,040 megawatts in February
2016.
He said the drop in generation was as a result of the
pipelines destruction in Forcados, which government was fixing and the current
power generation was 4000 megawatts.
He said the government had also signed 13 power generation
agreements on solar which would contribute 10,000 megawatts to the national
grid.
(NAN)
