In an
article written by Pete Hoekstra, the paper accused President Buhari of
Inflexibility, lack of vision and reactive approach to issues.Read below:
Nigerian President Muhummadu Buhari writes of
building an economic bridge to Nigeria’s future (“The Three Changes Nigeria
Needs,” op-ed, June 14). It’s hard to see how his administration’s
inflexibility, lack of vision and reactive approach will achieve this. Mr.
Buhari notes that building trust is a priority for Nigeria.
But an anticorruption drive that is selective and focused on
senior members of the opposition party creates deep political divisions.
Meanwhile, members of Mr. Buhari’s own cabinet, accused of large-scale
corruption, walk free. Seventy percent of the national treasury is spent on the
salaries and benefits of government officials, who make upwards of $2 million a
year. As for Mr. Buhari’s ideas to rebalance the economy and regenerate growth,
his damaging and outdated monetary policy has been crippling. The manufacturing
sector, essential to Nigeria’s diversification, has been hardest hit,
exacerbating an already fast-growing employment crisis. Foreign investors have
started to flee en masse. Mr. Buhari makes only brief mention of the country’s
deteriorating security situation. But security and stability are precursors to
economic growth and development. Boko Haram has been pushed back for now, but
little attention is paid to the structural issues that have spurred its rise.
Instead, the Nigerian government has diverted much-needed military resources to
the Niger Delta, where rising militancy has reduced Nigeria’s oil production to
less than half the country’s capacity, and half the amount required to service
the national budget. Much of these tensions arise from Mr. Buhari’s decision to
cut amnesty payments to militants and an excessively hard-line approach in a socially
and politically sensitive environment. Other ethnic tensions are also growing.
In the country’s south, protests have been met by a bloody response from the
Nigerian military, stoking the fire and galvanizing support for an independent
state of Biafra. Rising tensions could again pose one of the greatest threats
to Nigeria’s stability and future.
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