Nigeria Collapsed The Day Tinubu Was Sworn In — Babachir Lawal

Clement Olafusi

A former Secretary to the Government of the Federation(SGF), Babachir Lawal, has pronounced that Nigeria collapsed after the swearing of President Bola Tinubu on May 29, 2023.

He said that the surprising announcement of fuel subsidy removal by President Tinubu on the day of inauguration immersed Nigeria into economic cancer, saying that the policy was launched even before the cabinet was assembled.

Lawal made this comment whilst discussing state of the nation on Trust TV’s Daily Politics.

According to the erstwhile SGF, the announcement of fuel subsidy removal brought about increase in the transportation which is fundamentally the engine of business for both the rich and common man in Nigeria.

Lawal, when detailing the action taken on May 29, said for the fact that there was no cabinet and the Federal Executive Council to address the consequences of such a harsh policy was the calamity of Tinubu, culminating into to a complete collapse of the country.

“I can only repeat what I said before. I’ve spoken on this before. First of all, I did say one time you came into government on the day you were inaugurated,” he said.

“After swearing in you embark on the first major policies that are very impactful on the lives of the society. It is like a cowboy, or macho man removing subsidy. At that time, he didn’t have a minister of planning, that should plan the outcome, the consequences to take care.

“You don’t have a minister of finance who will calculate the impact of this society. You did not even have the federal executive council that will approve that, you have nothing. As at that time, nobody to advise, nobody to break out ‘what ifs’”.

Lawal further said, “So immediately after that inauguration, Nigeria collapsed. It is like a balloon. Nigeria fell down. It deflated completely. Immediately transportation (fare) tripled,”.

 

“That week! I used to buy animal feed for my cows from Zaria, I used to pay N270,000 per truck. Immediately that week, I couldn’t buy anymore, because transportation alone was going to cost me N1 million,” he explained from his personal experience as a farmer.

 

“I couldn’t afford it because the cost of fuel just jumped up. Everything. Last week I bought some equipment for my farm. I wanted to transport it from Kano, they were asking me to pay N3 million to transport three tractors and only to be put in a trailer. One trailer carrying three tractors!. Everything has gone up. So that policy alone crashed everything.”

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