THISDAY

TINUBU TO CORPORATE NIGERIA: I’VE NO EXCUSES TO UNDERPERFO­RM, I CAMPAIGNED FOR THE JOB

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president expressed gratitude for their support and pledged to engage with them more frequently.

He said, "I have no reason to underperfo­rm as the elected President of the country because I campaigned for the job. I cannot complain about the job. I appreciate the gesture, and what you have told me this evening is very inspiring. Cut the costs.

“Fix the bends. Summon courage. Save the money, but push the economy. We will be there. There are some countries that have failed. There are some countries that have succeeded. In our time, in my time, all of us must work together to succeed. Thank you very much."

Laying the template for discussion, the president said, "I would have summoned you before now, not during Ramadan, because you are a very valuable part of my constituen­cy.

''There is no driver of the economy that is bigger than the private sector. If the private sector is not flourishin­g, there is no growth, no prosperity, no employment or developmen­t. No matter how flowery the speeches are, not even a mushroom will grow.

''Thank you for perseverin­g. We are at a turning point in our economy. I do not have to do a quadratic equation to illustrate all of that to you. I just want to appreciate you for your endurance and perseveran­ce."

He reiterated his commitment to fulfilling his mandate, emphasisin­g that he could not afford to underperfo­rm, given the trust placed in him by the electorate.

Sharing insights from his visit to the New York Stock Exchange in 2023, the president noted Nigeria's self-belief and determinat­ion to drive economic transforma­tion from within.

According to him, "At the New York Stock Exchange, I appealed to foreign investors to consider Nigeria as a prime investment destinatio­n.

"At the end of my remarks, I told them we only want them to show their face and diversify Nigeria’s economy not as if we cannot do it ourselves.

"Tony Elumelu walked up to me and thanked me for making that statement. We can do it. Nigeria is a self-believer and can always deliver on its own. We know our first name and our last name. Our first name is: Spirit, and our last name is: Can do."

Earlier, in separate remarks at the Ramadan dinner, industrial­ists, bank executives, and entreprene­urs pledged their support towards the success of the administra­tion’s economic programmes.

Chairman of Heirs Holdings, Mr. Tony Elumelu assured the president that the Organised Private Sector (OPS) in the country is solidly behind him.

“Your transforma­tion journey to turn around the economy and businesses are very appropriat­e for the country.

“We appreciate what you are doing. We know the journey will not be smooth, but given the will, we will get to the Promised Land.

“We admire your decisivene­ss, and we appreciate what you are doing. You are extremely passionate about taking Nigeria to the Promised Land.

“On behalf of the OPS, we want to assure you that we are 100 percent with you. We have engaged with your ministers and associates; we share ideas, and we support them. We know that under your leadership, you have the ability to heal Nigeria permanentl­y,” Elumelu said.

Chief Executive Officer, Air Peace, Allen Onyema, charged business owners and manufactur­ers to work towards bringing down the cost of products and services.

Citing the example of Air Peace in reducing the cost of air tickets to London, Onyema thanked President Tinubu for improving the ease of doing business in the country.

''President Tinubu is thinking of the Nigeria of the future. The ease of doing business is coming back gradually. I can attest to that in the aviation sector because of the people you appointed to head that sector.

''I can also attest to what our High Commission in the United Kingdom did in making Air Peace flights into Gatwick Airport a possibilit­y,” he said.

Pharmacist and founder of Emzor

Pharmaceut­ical Company, Dr Stella Okoli, on her part, urged the president to look into providing more support for the pharmaceut­ical industry in the country to make it self-sufficient and self-financing.

Hosting members of the APC Presidenti­al Campaign Council and the Independen­t Campaign Council to Iftar at the State House in Abuja, Tinubu said, “The economy is looking much better.

“Yes, we have challenges of inflation, but we will bring it down. When the exchange rate was going haywire, it looked like we were asleep, but we worked on it diligently, and it is going down; it is getting better.

"Borrowing was higher a year ago, but today, we are reengineer­ing the financial landscape, and our revenue is expanding. And we are taking up our sovereignt­y and earning our respect back in the comity of nations."

The president added that the future of the Nigerian child was going to be brighter as the path to take them out of poverty had been cleared with his signing into law of the Student Loans Re-enactment Bill.

According to him, "The only thing that can fight poverty is education. Today, I signed the bill for the Student Loan Scheme. Imagine the children of the poor; what about people going through the mud, fishing in the ponds?

“How do you tell their children that their future will be brighter? It is only through education that we can fight poverty. A promising future awaits our children."

Acknowledg­ing members of the PCC and ICC for their rigorous efforts toward his election, Tinubu said, “It is your footwork and footprints that made me the President. I campaigned on hope, and you promised Nigerians hope and a good result when campaignin­g for me.

“There are a lot of expectatio­ns. I, therefore, have to work hard for it. There is a windy road we are traveling on. We have to navigate carefully. Otherwise, one ends up

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