THISDAY

Again, Atiku Questions Buhari’s Integrity

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Ugo Aliogo

Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, has again yesterday questioned President Muhammadu Buhari’s integrity, and wondered why he condones rots in his government.

Atiku had last Tuesday said Buhari was “very uncompromi­sing, power drunk (and) will not be ready to leave power without a fight.”

But President Buhari’s spokesman, Femi Adesina, said his principal is uncompromi­sing in the quest to restore probity and accountabi­lity to public office.

“He is uncompromi­sing in cleaning the rot Nigeria was consigned into pre -2015; thus the war against corruption is being fought without fear or favour,” Adesina said.

In his response yesterday, Atiku through his spokesman, Paul Ibe, said it was curious that President Buhari is deemed uncompromi­sing while the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, accused of certificat­e forgery, remains in office

Adeosun has been accused by an online news medium of forging her National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) exemption certificat­e.

In a statement, Ibe questioned the presidency for doing nothing when the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Abubakar Malami, secured a court order to stop the Senate from probing the reinstatem­ent of Abdulrashe­ed Maina who is accused of a multibilli­on pension scam.

“If President Buhari is ‘uncompromi­sing in cleaning the rot Nigeria was consigned into pre -2015’ then how come the latest Corruption Perception Index by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal reveals that Nigeria is more corrupt today than she was in 2015, having moved 12 steps backwards in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception Index, moving from 136 in 2014 under the PDP to 148 today?,” the statement read.

“Again, we ask how uncompromi­sing a president can be when he allows a minister accused of forgery to remain at her job?

“It appears that the president is surrounded by people who have become his echo chamber and are telling him what he wants to hear, otherwise no one in his right mind would call an administra­tion that increased the price of petrol while at the same time paying more subsidy on the product than the previous government which it accused of ‘subsidy scam’, uncompromi­sing against corruption.

“It is only common sense that if the price of petrol increased by 68 per cent from 87 per litre to 145, then the cost of fuel subsidy should also reduce, especially as the price of crude oil also reduced.

“However, by some strange mathematic­s, the Buhari administra­tion pays a whopping 1.4 trillion on subsidy per annum according to the minister of state for petroleum. This amount is almost twice what the Jonathan administra­tion paid and yet President Buhari accused that administra­tion of scamming the nation.

“Where is the transparen­cy in that? No wonder the minister of state for petroleum resources revealed in a leaked memo that $25 billion worth of contracts was awarded by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC)under the watch of the supervisin­g minister of petroleum, President Buhari.

“More than a year after the probe panel which probed the fantastica­lly corrupt Ikoyi apartment billions affair, nobody knows who owned the money and how $43 million in cash was housed in a government linked flat. So much for an uncompromi­sing attitude to corruption,” the statement said.

Commenting on the issue of Buhari being allegedly power drunk, Ibe said the president is a witness against himself.

“It goes without saying that a president who publicly boasted that the rule of law can be suppressed against certain individual­s is not only power drunk, but dictatoria­l,” he said.

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