‘Nigerians now united by hunger, starvation under Tinubu’s watch’ – Peter Obi

Labour Party’s presidential candidate in the 2023 election,  Peter Obi, says Nigeria, under President Bola Tinubu’s watch, has become one big nation united by hunger and starvation.

In a statement shared on his X account yesterday, Obi said, “Today, we are one big nation united by hunger and starvation, to the point of dying to make ends meet”.

Berating the government for wasting resources on expensive renovations, Obi urged Tinubu’s “government to lead the crusade against hunger by investing aggressively in our agricultural sector”.

According to him, “Most distressing is that in all our adversity, our leaders have resorted to spending stupendous amounts of resources on wasteful items like ordering expensive renovations of offices and residences that are already in luxurious conditions.

“We have seen our government spend more money on car parks for politicians than for the running of half of our teaching hospitals. In all this, there has been scanty attention to the living conditions of the ordinary people they were elected to care for”.

Recall that yesterday, Nigerians in Lagos protested rising food prices, calling on the Government to ameliorate their suffering.

Also, last week Monday, residents of Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, also protested, chanting: “Tinubu ole”. Similar protests had been held in Osun, Niger, Kano State as well as Lagos, Tinubu’s home State.

Market surveys reported in February showed that prices of most food items have increased by almost 100 percent since President Tinubu assumed office last year.

Though spiking prices of food predated Tinubu’s government, the sudden fuel subsidy removal and floating of the naira have seen petrol prices jump from N145 to N630, shooting prices up astronomically as the naira continues its freefall against the dollar, trading for N1,825 against a dollar last week Tuesday.

President Tinubu, in response to public outcry on the rising cost of food driven by skyrocketing inflation in the country, had directed the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security to release about 42,000 metric tonnes of grain, including maize, millet and garri.

He also charged National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu, State Security Service and Nigerian police to go after food hoarders. The Nigerian Customs also announced the distribution of confiscated food items to Nigerians to ameliorate hunger.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF), in a summary of its assessment of Nigeria’s economy, lauded Tinubu’s administration for its structural reforms, scrapping fuel subsidies and floating the naira.

Related news

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.