The Presidency has blasted former vice-president Abubakar Atiku, saying he was part of the rot the country has become.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, made this claim to fault former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, for saying that Nigeria is slipping into a failed state.
Atiku had in a statement titled, ‘World’s Highest Unemployment Rate: Time To Help This Government, Help Nigeria”, expressed fear that the country is on the precipice.
Reacting on Sunday, to the points raised by Atiku in his statement, particularly on unemployment, Femi Adesina, said about 30 million Nigerians were unemployed before Buhari took office.
Adesina said the recent report released by the National Bureau of Statistics that 23.2 million Nigerians are unemployed was not new.
Adesina said, “You will recall that in the build-up to the 2015 elections, when the APC was campaigning, the figure that was used by then candidate Buhari was that a minimum of 30 million Nigerians were unemployed, particularly youths and that his government was going to do something about it.
“That was in 2014/2015. So, don’t make it appear like a genie that just came out of the bottle. No, it had always been there. It had always been there.”
Adesina added, “The former Vice-President was in power for eight years. Now, he is in the opposition. You can’t take whatever he says as the gospel. The question is when former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar was in government with President Olusegun Obasanjo, where did they take the country?
“Where did they leave the country? I have seen clips on social media where he said some things they promised to do, particularly on power; some people collected some trillions and didn’t deliver… Former Vice-President is part of the rot this country became.
“He cannot exculpate himself; he cannot sit in judgment over anybody. He played his part for eight years and they left the country where they left it. He cannot like Pontius Pilate, begin to wash himself clean of what Nigeria has become.”
Recall that Atiku had lamented that his earlier warnings to the President Buhari administration were ignored.
He said, “In a situation where we are simultaneously the world headquarters for extreme poverty, the world capital for out-of-school children, and the nation with the highest unemployment rate on earth, there is a very real and present danger that we might slip into the failed states index – God forbid!”
Atiku added that “Even with the paucity of funds, we continue to ramp up government involvement in sectors that ought to be left to the private sector, with the latest being the ill-advised $1.5bn so called rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt refinery that has failed to turn a profit for years.
“What this government must realise is that the unprecedented insecurity Nigeria is facing is the result of youth unemployment.”