CITING
misinformation, the Federal Government at the weekend debunked the
allegation made by the former Vice-President World Bank, Dr. Oby
Ezekwesili, that the Presidents Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and Goodluck
Jonathan administrations squandered the $67 billion reserves (including
$45 billion in external and $22 billion in the excess crude account)
left behind by the then President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Also, Ezekwesili has charged Nigerians not to be afraid to demand
accountability and good governance. She said good governance increases
service delivery and provides strong leadership, adding that governance
was considered to be okay when it was free from corruption and accountable to the people.
Ezekwesili was said to have made the allegation at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) convocation on January 24, 2013.
Addressing reporters in Abuja Sunday, the Minister of Information,
Labaran Maku, faulted Ezekwesili’s claims, stressing that it lacked
facts.
The minister explained that since President Obasanjo left office, the
nation’s reserves had risen and fallen, adding that the fluctuations
was as a result of the global financial crisis.
Maku queried the former World Bank Vice-president on N352.3 billion
she collected when she was the former Minister of Education and other
educational interventional fund asking on what impact it had on
education during her time.
He stressed that despite the challenges faced by the current
administration, there was the need for people to acknowledge
government’s achievement.
Maku added: “The recent statements by Mrs. Obiageli Ezekwesili at the
UNN’s convocation ceremony on January 24, 2013, betray a surprisingly
limited understanding of government finances. These statements are even more
curious in light of the fact that she held senior positions in
government, and more recently, a position as a vice president of World
Bank. However, rather than speculate about her motives, we would focus
on the facts.
The statement by the former World Bank Vice President that Presidents
Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan squandered $67 billion in reserves
(including $45 billion in external and $22 billion in the excess crude
account) left by Obasanjo administration at the end of May 2007 is
factually incorrect. At the end of May 2007, Nigeria’s gross reserves
stood at $43.13 billion – comprising the CBN’s external reserves of
$31.5 billion, $9.43 billion in the Excess Crude Account, and $2.18
billion in the Federal Government’s saving. These figures can be
independently verified from the CBN’s records. The figure of $67 billion
alleged in her statement is therefore clearly fictitious “However,
since President Obasanjo left office, the reserves have experienced
fluctuations, rising from $43.13 billion in May 2007, peaking at $62
billion in September 2008 during the Yar’Adua/Jonathan administration
when oil prices peaked at $147 per barrel, and falling subsequently to a
low $31.7 in September 2011. This fall in reserves was a result of the
vicissitudes of the global financial crisis, which caused CBN
interventions in the currency market to defend the value of the naira.
The excess crude savings,
a component of the reserves, was also used to stimulate the economy at
the height of the global financial crisis to the tune of about $1
billion (or 0.5 per cent of our 2009 GDP). As a result, Nigeria is one
of the few countries in the world that did not seek assistance from
international financial institutions. It should be noted that the fiscal
stimulus used to shore up the economy during that period was shared by
all three-tiers of government, including commitments of about $5.5
billion made under the Obasanjo administration for power projects.”
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