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If Not for Fear of Boko Haram’s Bombs Jonathan Would Have Fully Removed Fuel Subsidy – Sanusi

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If Not for Fear of Boko Haram’s Bombs Jonathan Would Have Fully Removed Fuel Subsidy – Sanusi

By: Michael Mike

The Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II has disclosed that the decision to suspend the fuel subsidy removal by President Goodluck Jonathan was because of the fear of Boko Haram’s suicide attacks on protesters and never because of the protest in itself.

Speaking at the Oxford Global Think Tank Leadership Conference, themed: “Better Leader for a Better Nigeria,” the Emir, who was at the time the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the prime promoter of fuel subsidy removal, said the right definition for what was happening with what was termed fuel subsidy was a hedge with the government paying to keep the price at a point at all time.

He said: “It was not a subsidy, it was a hedge. You see, a subsidy by definition, the government says I’ll pay X percent of the price. That’s the subsidy. I’ll pay 20 percent of the price. Whatever it is. Price goes up, you pay more, I pay more. Price goes down, you pay less, I pay less. What we had in this country is what in risk management you call a naked hedge. The worst possible derivative you can have.

“The government said to Nigerians, 200 million Nigerians, you will not pay more than X amount per litre. On petrol, no matter what the price of petrol is. So all price goes up from $40 to $140, the federal government pays the difference.

“Exchange rate moves from $155 to $300, the government pays the difference. Interest rates move from 5 percent to 15 percent, the government pays. Remember the price of petrol and what the calculations include, the cost of crude, the cost of the by-product, the cost of transportation, even interest rates, demurrage.

“If you look at the template, all of those amounts were being absorbed. The federal government was saying I have an unlimited pocket. So move from a point where we were using revenues to pay subsidies to where we had to borrow money to pay subsidies, to where we had to borrow money to pay interest on the borrowed money, we had become bankrupt.

“Anyone who takes a naked hedge ends up being bankrupted, especially with a commodity where you don’t control the price. So this was the point in 2012. Now, if Nigerians had allowed the Jonathan government to remove the subsidy in 2011, that would have been pain.

But that pain would have been a very, very tiny fraction of what we are facing today. This is the cost of today. At that time, we worked out the numbers in the Central Bank, and I stood up and put my credit in front of the line and said, remove the subsidy today, inflation moves up from 11 percent to 13 percent. I will bring it down a bit later. Oh, that’s about 30-something percent inflation. That was where we were.”

On Jonathan’s decision to suspend the planned subsidy removal, the Emit said: “And you know, the only reason the government compromised at that time, maybe you should know this, the only reason the government compromised and did 50% not 100% was Boko Haram. Because there were thousands of Nigerians on the streets in Lagos and Kano and Kaduna and all that. We had suicide bombers in the country.

“And it was like, if one day one of these suicide bombers goes to these Nigerians and explodes the bomb, and you have 200 corpses, it will no longer be about subsidy. So I got to give President Jonathan the credit. He was determined to do it.

He noted that Nigeria is a classless society, explaining that: “If you take the people you call leaders, go to the Senate, go to the House of Reps, you can go and pick 109 Nigerians at random, without election.
Put them in the Senate chambers and the results may not be different from what you’re getting out. Because the truth is, you have highly educated people in government, but they live like illiterates. They forget their education behind.

“When you talk about praise singing, why would a man who is an educated man, an accomplished man, why would he be a praise singer to anyone? Why would he not be able to face his boss and say, for that, we’re not doing very good, this is the truth? And how would a person in government not have the confidence to listen to those around him and take criticism?

“You have got people who are supposed to be the representatives of the values of society. By the time you become a governor, honestly, you should be beyond looking for money. You have been given an opportunity to take care of the lives of millions of people, to educate children, to save lives, to provide healthcare, to build infrastructure, while all you are thinking of is a house? I mean, are you that cheap?

“And you see them, and I remember the day they leave office, after a few years, they die, and the children are fighting over the money. Then they get the money, and then they go on drugs, and everything is wasted. That money would have been better spent, educating millions of young people, and save their lives. So if we really want to fix this country, we need to have a class. The ruling class needs to have values. Values beyond the market.”

He decried that many leaders are surrounded by sycophants, adding that: “We need to begin to ask as leaders who do we surround ourselves with?”

On his part, Mr. Atedo Peterside, a Nigerian entrepreneur, investment banker and economist, the founder of Stanbic IBTC Bank and Anap Foundation, lamented that many politicians do not come to serve their people but rather to steal.

He decried that the cause of underdevelopment in Africa is that leadership is mainly about state capture and corruption.

He alleged that. “They came to capture what belongs to everybody, that’s for the common good, for themselves and their narrow elites. Until we solve that problem, we will remain in this field.“

He noted that it is not about the beauty or otherwise of reforms, stating that the difference is the sincerity. “Did the leader come to serve or did he come to steal?”

He lamented that: “People take positions not based on the truth, but based on what personal agenda they are pursuing. So I’ll be the first one to give credit to this government for removing the fuel subsidy, which some of us started campaigning for from the very first economic summit over 30 years ago.

“But the same president must take the blame for sabotaging the efforts to remove the fuel subsidy in the past, in 2012. The speeches are there. But the best time to have planted the tree was 25 years ago.

“The second best time is now, so let’s focus on the now. The important thing is that the government has done the correct thing in terms of removing an unaffordable subsidy. The same government has done the correct thing, which has been done before, to give us what I would consider to be largely market-determined exchange rates, which gives you some exchange rates stability.

“So you ask me, what would I have done differently? That question shows that anybody with the right brain on his head would have done those two things. But guess what? How long does it take to do those things?“

He said: “We had market-determined exchange rates largely. So that’s a one-day action. You bite the bullet on the first day.

“What differentiates you thereafter is your subsequent actions. So those measures improve fiscal balance. They give all three tiers of government so much more revenue.

“And that’s where the problem starts. What is the point of giving the thief more revenue if he’s only going to steal it? So across all the local governments of Nigeria, across every state government, and at the federal level, the real test is what is being done with that revenue in their hands. Is that revenue supposed to be used to fuel 400 cars to escort the president to the airport and cut off the revenue in the process? Is that what you did it for? Let me tell you what the correct thing was.

“The real difficulty, the real action, the real result was to help eliminate poverty, was to get the economy functioning. As soon as we did those two things, what could be done, each of them, when you take a day, an announcement, is your subsequent actions. When the economic summit turned 25 years, I was in this same room.

“I recommended that the government measure a mutual subsidy. I also said that as soon as we do it, the following day, even the day before, start distributing cash to the poorest Nigerians. They all have names.”

The Former Director General Nigerian Stock Exchange and Convener of the meeting, Arunma Otey: “Nigeria, is a great example of what the possibilities are. When all hands are on deck.”

Otey who also used the occasion to present her book: “All Hands on Decj: Unleash Prosperity through World-Class Capital Markets,” said: “We do think that we need to continue to focus on the openness of finance, share in some of the very inclusive approaches. We need to build a bigger pie, and we need to make sure that that pie is available to our creators.”

She noted that: “One of the things that will help our nation is a focus on reasonably priced long-term patient capital. And so part of what I advocate for is creating the environment that allows us to have long-term patient capital that is available to businesses, that is available to government. And when I say available to government, the current government, previous governments have invested in infrastructure.

She added that: “We need to invest in infrastructure in this nation. I was looking at data as I was thinking about this conference, and China, over the years, invested 24% of its GDP in infrastructure. At best we do 4-5%. If we want to reach the infrastructure deficit in our nation, we would have to do at least 12%. So there’s some foundational things we will do.”

Otey said: “We need to scale. We need to do much more. And we need to raise money, so that small businesses can do better, so that the government can do more.

And we as individuals need to invest in our nation. And that’s why the time is now hands on deck.”

She asked: “Why aren’t we exploiting those 40 minerals in commercial quantities? Why are minerals still in the exclusive list of the federal government? Why can’t we have it decentralised, so that every state can produce the minerals in their own state? Why are we decentralising a nation of 230 million people?”

On his part, the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of The Economy, Mr. Wale Edun, said: “Today we are talking about leadership. And I’ll just briefly say that, yes, Africa, with all its human resources, and of course, that is the most important resource that Africa has now. We are going to be the world’s workforce.
Africa will provide by 2030 or so 25% of the world’s workforce. We are a young continent compared to the aging continents of Asia, aging continents of Europe. So we have to prepare ourselves for that historic role.

“In Nigeria, leadership changed in 2023. And the under president, Bola Ahmed, changed for the better. If you look at the record, if you look at the statistics, if you look at the progress that has been made since 2023.

“However, the statistics, the improved growth rates, the stable exchange rates, the lowering inflation, those are just one side of the story. And the most important aspect is the human side, the effect on people’s daily experience, the cost of food, the cost of transport, how they are living their lives. And it is to that that I think rather than focusing on the various statistics, what I will say is that there is an attempt to ensure that the pains of reform have immediately been alleviated.”

He added that: “And that’s why there is in place a transparent, accountable, and robust system providing direct payments, in the first instance, to a total of 15 million households. And you know, in the holding area, before we joined this gathering, there were comments that in their villages, in their towns, they have not had reports of anybody receiving those payments. So immediately, we called for the data, and shortly we will give them the data of the people that have received first, second, and third payments directly.”

If Not for Fear of Boko Haram’s Bombs Jonathan Would Have Fully Removed Fuel Subsidy – Sanusi

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NESREA Shuts Sunseed Oil Facility in Zaria Over Air Pollution Violations

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NESREA Shuts Sunseed Oil Facility in Zaria Over Air Pollution Violations

By: Michael Mike

The National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) has ordered the closure of the Sunseed Oil processing plant in Zaria, Kaduna State, following findings of severe air pollution linked to the facility’s operations.

NESREA said the action was taken after investigations confirmed that the plant was emitting harmful pollutants into the atmosphere in breach of the National Environmental (Air Quality Control) Regulations.

The regulations require industries to install effective pollution control systems and adopt cleaner production methods to minimize environmental and health risks.

A statement by the agency’s spokesperson, Nwamaka Ejiofor on Tuesday, said the level of emissions from the Sunseed Oil facility posed a direct threat to the surrounding environment and residents in nearby communities, prompting immediate intervention to halt further damage.

She noted that the enforcement exercise reflects the agency’s resolve to ensure that industrial operators comply with environmental standards and to protect the public from the dangers associated with uncontrolled industrial emissions and effluents.

Commenting on the development, the Director-General of NESREA, Prof. Innocent Barikor, warned companies operating across the country to adhere strictly to national environmental laws.

He stressed that the agency would continue to take decisive action against facilities whose operations endanger public health or degrade the environment.

NESREA reiterated its commitment to regular monitoring and enforcement, noting that environmental protection remains a critical component of sustainable development in Nigeria.

NESREA Shuts Sunseed Oil Facility in Zaria Over Air Pollution Violations

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Atiyaye unveils a book on the history of Kukar-Gadu

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Atiyaye unveils a book on the history of Kukar-Gadu

By: Yahaya Wakili

Millions of naira were realized at the Unveiling Potentials of Kukar-Gadu, Launching of History of Kukar-Gadu Book, Presentation of Kukar-Gadu Physical Development Plan, and Commissioning of Kukar-Gadu Empowerment Development Initiative at Kukar-Gadu town of Yobe state.

In his keynote address, the Chairman of the Kukar-Gadu Empowerment Development Initiative (KEDI), TPI, Barnabas Atiyaye, said the Kukar-Gadu Empowerment Development Initiative was triggered by Victim Support Funds’ (VSF) proactive intervention activities chaired by Gen. T. Y. Danjuma from inception to its closure in 2024.

He said through KEDI, we aim to create opportunities where there was once struggle to restore hope, where there was once despair, and to build bridges where there was once division. We are resolved to work for a Kukar-Gadu that is empowered, self-reliant, forward-looking, and united. We desire to be a springboard for the development of not only the Kukar-Gadu or Fika local government area, but the entire Yobe state and, by extension, the nation.

Mr. Barnabas revealed that the master plan of Kukar-Gadu is more than a technical document; it is a covenant with the future, a clear roadmap that defines how we as a community shall shape the physical, social, and economic destiny of our community, and it will also provide guidance for infrastructure, housing, agriculture, education, commerce, and environmental sustainability.

“The history of Kukar-Gadu” is more than a collection of dates and events. It is the story of our fathers, their struggles, their courage, their triumphs, and their faith. It tells of the foundations upon which we now stand, and in commissioning this book, we are not only honoring our past, we are preserving it for generations yet unborn.

Atiyaye appeals to individuals, schools, libraries, and government institutions to obtain copies of this book; it serves as a source of knowledge and inspiration for our youth so that they may know their roots and carry our values forward with pride. We pray that this book will keep alive the spirit of unity, courage, and progress that defines Kukar-Gadu. Ameen.

Speaking, the Chairman of the occasion, Dr. Ali Adamu Tikau (Talban Tikau), ably represented by Professor Dauda Abubakar, said that to have the Emir of Fika, along with the Emir of Pataskum, along with representatives of His Excellency, Governor Mai Mala Buni, CON, COMN, the representative of the Senator of the National Assembly, and many other personalities to come to this village in the Fika local government area, I will say that we are so excited and very proud of what is happening today.

He said the launching of the history of Kukar-Gadu is also a milestone at the program, and it is one of the highlights. It was a book written by Malam Ibrahim Sara Bangalu, who is also a son of Kukar-Gadu, and I had the opportunity of editing the book and making the necessary corrections before it was taken to press. It is a history that will help us reflect on who we are as a people. When a people do not know their history, when a people do not know where they come from, they will easily get lost. That is the purpose of launching.

“I would say that Kukar-Gadu, Goya district, Fika local government, and Gudi are places that are very special because of the type of educated people they have produced. I am a product of this community, and I am a living testament to the opportunities this community gave me, and I believe many are benefiting from it.

Also speaking, the district head of Goya, Alhaji Musa Garba Daya, said what the people of Kukar-Gadu did has become a big challenge to all the people of Goya district; they broke the record and urged the people to wake up to create something for the betterment of the people.

“If you observe, they print a master plan of Kukar-Gadu and focus on many years ahead. So this initiative—I am so impressed with it because it will help for the fiscal planning of the area for over ten years, as Alhaji Musa Garba Daya said.

According to him, the people of Kukar-Gadu are also commissioning the Empowerment Development Initiative, which was triggered by Victim Support Funds (VSF), chaired by Gen. T. Y. Danjuma, and I appreciate it so much because these will greatly assist both our youth and women of the area.

Atiyaye unveils a book on the history of Kukar-Gadu

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ActionAid Nigeria Warns of Rising Debt, Weak Social Spending in 2026 Budget Proposal

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ActionAid Nigeria Warns of Rising Debt, Weak Social Spending in 2026 Budget Proposal

By: Michael Mike

ActionAid Nigeria has raised serious concerns over the Federal Government’s proposed 2026 Appropriation Bill, warning that the budget could worsen Nigeria’s debt burden and further sideline key social sectors critical to poverty reduction and inclusive growth.

In its review of the ₦58.18 trillion budget proposal, the organisation said the 5.8 per cent increase over the 2025 approved budget does not sufficiently address long-standing fiscal and structural challenges. Instead, it noted that the financing plan, size of the deficit, and sectoral priorities pose risks to fiscal sustainability and accountability.

ActionAid Nigeria expressed particular concern over the continued extension of budget implementation timelines, which has resulted in the 2026 budget running alongside extended 2024 and 2025 budgets. According to the organisation, operating multiple budgets simultaneously weakens transparency, limits effective legislative oversight, and increases the risk of mismanagement of public funds, especially for capital and social sector projects.

The group, in a statement on Tuesday by its Country Director, Dr. Andrew Mamedu, also pointed to repeated post-submission changes by the National Assembly, including upward adjustments to allocations without secured funding sources, as a key factor contributing to funding gaps, delayed releases, and the rollover of projects across fiscal years.

On the fiscal outlook, ActionAid Nigeria highlighted that the proposed 2026 budget projects revenue of ₦34.33 trillion against total spending of ₦58.18 trillion, leaving a deficit of ₦23.85 trillion. It described the figure as the largest deficit in Nigeria’s history, representing sharp increases over the 2024 and 2025 deficits.

It warned that heavy reliance on borrowing, without strong investment in productive and social sectors, could deepen inequality and constrain long-term development.

ActionAid Nigeria said that despite government claims that education, health, agriculture, infrastructure, and security are priority areas, lamented that allocations to social sectors remain inadequate.

Mamedu, in the statement, noted that education allocated ₦3.52 trillion, about six per cent of the total budget, and health receiving ₦2.48 trillion, just over four per cent—are both far below international benchmarks, and in contrast with defence allotted spending standing at ₦5.41 trillion.

The organisation also faulted the budget for failing to address underemployment and poor-quality jobs, particularly among women and rural populations, noting insufficient investment in agriculture, rural infrastructure, and women-led enterprises. It further warned that weak funding for social protection programmes could worsen hardship for millions of Nigerians facing rising living costs.

ActionAid Nigeria also criticised the late submission of the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework, Fiscal Strategy Paper, and the 2026 Appropriation Bill, describing it as a breach of the Fiscal Responsibility Act.

The organisation urged the Federal Government and the National Assembly to end the practice of running multiple budgets, strengthen fiscal discipline, reduce dependence on borrowing, and significantly increase funding for education, health, agriculture, and social protection.

It stressed that Nigeria cannot overcome poverty through debt-driven spending, but through a people-centred and accountable budget that prioritises human development.

ActionAid Nigeria Warns of Rising Debt, Weak Social Spending in 2026 Budget Proposal

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