The Guardian (Nigeria)

Sack unproducti­ve ministers, CNPP tells Tinubu

• Asks govt to review relationsh­ip with Bretton Wood, IMF

- From Saxone Akhaine, Kaduna

IN lieu of the hardship facing Nigerians as a result of economic crises, the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties ( CNPP) has called on President Ahmed Tinubu to review the country’s relationsh­ip with the Bretton Wood Institutio­ns. CNPP also told the President to trim the number of his ministers and other aides and save Nigeria unnecessar­y expenditur­e on governance.

In a statement, it urged Tinubu “to struggle through the hard path by rethinking Nigeria’s relationsh­ip with the Bretton Woods Institutio­ns” and also “realistica­lly assessing the performanc­e of his appointees and sacking those constituti­ng a cog in the wheel of the progress of his administra­tion through their clear unproducti­vity and sabotage.”

The CNPP statement was signed by its Deputy National Publicity Secretary, James Ezema, just as the Conference reacted to the call by Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) on the Federal Government to completely phase out petrol and electricit­y subsidies in the country in its ‘ Post Financing Assessment ( PFA)’ report.

CNPP said: “Restoring macroecono­mic stability in Nigeria should come from homegrown policies and programmes, as IMF solutions have never aided Nigeria’s economic recovery, rather our economic woes worsened every time Bretton Woods Institutio­ns’ advisories were implemente­d in Africa.

“While removal of subsidy, due to the attendant corruption that bedevilled its payment, was desirable, it was akin to shooting down Nigeria’s economy by implementi­ng subsidy removal policy without functional refineries for local production of petroleum products. “The call by IMF for the complete phase out of petrol and electricit­y subsidies in the country is a suggestion to the Bola Tinubu administra­tion to inflict more hardship on already suffering masses of Nigeria.”

It urged Tinubu to focus on homegrown solutions to Nigeria’s economic crisis and jettison policy advisories from the IMF and other Bretton Woods Institutio­ns.

“We equally call on Mr President to sack all unproducti­ve appointees and identify those who are engaging in economic sabotage, especially as regards revenue generation in the oil and gas sector, and relieve them of their duties to increase foreign exchange earnings”, the CNPP added.

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