Sunday, 28th July 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
Breaking News:

Nigeria in emergency, time for Tinubu to be decisive – UK varsity don

By Mansur Aramide
28 July 2024   |   8:21 am
United Kingdom-based stalwart of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Abdulmumin Ajia, has advised the federal government of Nigeria to rejig agriculture and transportation policies as ways of addressing demands of proponents of the August 1 planned protest on economic hardship. Speaking with journalists in Ilorin, Ajia, who is also an Associate Professor of Business…

United Kingdom-based stalwart of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Abdulmumin Ajia, has advised the federal government of Nigeria to rejig agriculture and transportation policies as ways of addressing demands of proponents of the August 1 planned protest on economic hardship.

Speaking with journalists in Ilorin, Ajia, who is also an Associate Professor of Business Administration at Lincoln University, Missouri, USA, said, “Nigeria is in an emergency.”

He added, “The federal government should deploy a cohesive agricultural policy and rejig the nation’s transportation system to tackle the current socioeconomic challenge which the nation is currently facing.”

According to Ajia, Nigeria needs a president who would lead from the front by carrying out fieldwork across the states of the federation to complement the desk job he is doing.

“The government should declare an emergency on agriculture and map out each state based on their individual comparative advantage on agricultural viability, facilitate tools, and implement large-scale mechanised farming. This can be done with presidential fiat,” he suggested.

On transportation, the APC boss urged the government to think of building light rails in each state capital.

READ ALSO: Address the country to avert protest, C & S leader urges president Tinubu

“This could be done through borrowing, and it can lead us to prosperity. The president should engage a country like Brazil to bring in MarcoPolo buses to rid our roads of keke and okada, which is not a civilised way of transportation. Farmers have produce in the farms, but the removal of fuel subsidy has made transportation so expensive to bring their produce down to urban areas.”

To tackle the nation’s current economic hardship, the Business Administration lecturer also said that the government should meet with selected and accomplished economic experts”that could be fished out across Nigeria (and the world over) to work for him rather than cronies.”

“These experts need not be politicians but those people who are ready to serve the country,” he said.

Against the backdrop of a planned protest by groups of Nigerians against current economic hardship in the land, Ajia said that peaceful protest is the hallmark of democracy.

“The protesters should be allowed to protest and should not be harassed but given maximum security to safeguard their lives, those of other citizens, and their property.”

“The hardship in the land is very concerning with 40 percent food inflation and 34.5 percent overall inflation,” he noted.

The varsity lecturer said that he expected the president, governors, and national and state Houses of Assembly to sit down to tackle the identified challenges on behalf of the Nigerian people, as consequences of the protest.

“They say they are working presently, but it’s not showing. A walk around the markets shows that things are extremely difficult,” he added.

Ajia, who said that dialogue can be employed while the protest is going on, however, added that people have the right to show their displeasure peacefully.

“The government could identify leaders of the protest movement, meet with them to assure them of meeting their demands or discuss such demands they could not meet. Probably, the protest may be called off.”

“It took the government 14 months to negotiate and pass a law on minimum wage. One wonders how they can negotiate a call-off of the protest and implement the demands,” he said.

In this article

0 Comments