WHAT BUHARI IS BRINGING TO THE TABLE AS OIL MINISTER- Femi Adesina
Mr. Femi
Adesina, Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and
Publicity, was guest on Kakaaki, a program of Africa Independent
Television (AIT) on Thursday, October 1.
Here are excerpts from the interview:
Q: First of all, let’s look at the President's October 1 broadcast. What do you make of it?
A: We must recognise that it is a National Day broadcast, and he
started by reviewing the state of the polity, particularly our march
towards nationhood 55 years after flag independence. Are we a nation
yet? Are we just a conglomeration of ethnic nationalities? I think on a
day like this, that is the most important thing, all the others are
ancillary, though important. It was an efficient broadcast, it may be
short but it touched a number of crucial issues.
Q: One issue
that has been generating lots of reactions is the ministerial list. The
President did promise sometime in July that he was going to name his
ministers in September. But what we saw was a submission of ministerial
list to the National Assembly.
A: We also need to mind the
process and the procedure, Our federal lawmakers would be the first
people to kick if the President just reeled out the names of the
Ministers and their portfolios. That would not be in order. What he does
is to nominate and send to the Senate and after clearance, the
Ministers begin to work. At any given time, procedure must be followed.
Q: Part of the broadcast that a lot of people would have loved to hear
more from the President is the issue of national unity and inclusiveness
in running the affairs of state. It appears that the President did not
dwell on that and a lot of people looking at Nigeria believe that
national unity and inclusiveness appear to be quite elusive. One would
have expected the President to reassure the country that Nigeria stays
as one and this is what I am going to do so that everyone has a sense of
belonging.
A: Well, let me read this paragraph if you will
permit, the President says here, “We have all the attributes of a great
nation, we are not there yet because the one commodity we have been
unable to exploit to the fullness is the unity of purpose .This would
have enabled us to achieve not only more orderly political evolution and
integration , but also, continuity and economic progress. Countries
far less endowed have made greater coherence and unity of purpose”. So,
he touched on what you said.
Q: Yes, he touched on it, but what I mean is that he should have dwelled on it, talking about Nigeria at 55.
A: You should also realize that he is President, and he should not be
dwelling on just challenges, rather he should be working to achieve
solutions , which is quite better.
Q: There are some agitations
that the President seems to favour some parts of the country, so the
eagerness to see who and who will make the ministerial list...
A: He also said that order is better than speed. What Nigerians want in
these appointments appears to be speed, so that they can calculate how
many are from the North, South, East and West, and all that. But we will
get there, that is what the President is saying.
Q: The
President wants to manage the country’s resources and he didn’t make any
statement about the economy or the real sector, why is this so?
A: I think we are forgetting that it is a National Day broadcast. It is
about Nigeria, our people, the way we have lived together. What are the
challenges and how are the challenges being surmounted? All those other
things cannot necessarily come into a National Day broadcast, that is
what I feel.
Q: How long shall Nigerians wait for the President to say something on the economic direction?
A: The economic direction is not an opinion of one man but an
aggregation of what a team feels and what they have agreed upon. That
team is unfolding, we have a list of proposed ministers, that list has
not been unfolded and when they are approved with their portfolios ,
they are the ones that will articulate the economic direction. What if
the President as one man has said ,this is the direction and the team
comes and feels different?
Q: Not as one man, because he has said
that he has been in consultation with the Vice President and some other
individual concerning solutions to our problems . Based on that
statement, Nigerians are expecting that …
A: That would still not amount to an economic direction.
Q: Let us talk about some things. It was reported that the President
says that his relationship with the Senate president would depend on the
outcome of the Code of Conduct trial. Could you confirm that ?
A: I was at a session in New York when the President was granting that
interview to Sahara TV and he said the relationship between them is
cordial. The interviewer asked if they communicate and he said , yes,
many times. There were some appointments that he couldn’t have made
without writing the senate president. He was further asked what would be
the relationship in the light of the code of conduct tribunal trial
that is going on, and he said, “Yes, I have to wait for that process to
end and that would determine the relationship”, which I think is just
right.
Q: Ok, I think that you need to break it down further,
when he said that he needs to wait for the process before the
relationship becomes cordial. Does it mean, it is not cordial right now?
A: There is separation of powers between the executive and legislature…
Q: The President and Senate president are from the same party and they
need to have a very cordial working relationship for the President to
succeed.
A: Is there an indication that the relationship is not cordial?
Q: From the statement of the President that he is awaiting the outcome
of the trial, it has pitched him on a particular level… it seems the
President is saying that the senate President should not come close to
me pending when the trial is over, to know whether you are clean enough
or not.
A: What the president meant was that he was not going to
interfere in any way and the process must play out. He was emphatic
about that and of course if the process finishes, whichever way it goes,
it determines the relationship between the two individuals. For a
government that pays high premium on transparency and accountability, it
is very important that whoever is in a top decision must be seen to be
accountable to the people.
Q: One would also ask if the President is conscious of the assumption of innocence until proven guilty.
A: In all he has said, there is nowhere that assumption has been
breached, No way and nowhere that it has been breached. He says that the
Senate president is innocent for now and when the process ends, they
continue the relationship.
Q: Ok now, let’s look at the
ministerial list that was sent (September 30). We understand from what
is in the news that just a few names were sent to the Senate, can you
confirm this? And when would the rest be sent?
A: The President himself was clear about that, he said the first batch but nobody knows how many is in the batch
Q: I am sure that you know…
A: laughs... No…No…, you know, you are a news person and you can’t
depend on everything you hear. It has been addressed to the Senate
president, the list is there, he will unfold it officially. Nobody can
say precisely how many. You said a few, you can’t be sure because the
Senate president has not unfolded it.
Q: How many people are in the batch?
A: Well, it depends on the President. There are certain prerogatives
that the President has. Ministers are one of them. He has said that this
is the first batch, I think that we should wait and see who are those
in the first batch and after that we know how many remains, because the
constitution already states that there must be a minister in each of the
states. We have 36 states in the country, so when the list is unfolded,
we know how many remains.
Q: You have just returned from the
United Nations General Assembly in New York, we heard that a lot of
things happened there, like missing meetings that the President was
supposed to attend.
A: Now, let me talk about the supposedly
missed meeting. The truth is that, you don’t miss meetings that you are
not scheduled to attend, That is just the truth. If you are not
scheduled for a meeting, can you miss it? No.
Q: Was Nigeria not scheduled for the meeting?
A: No, Nigeria was not scheduled to be at that meeting, that is the truth.
Q: O'Brien of the UN was reported as saying that he was quite disappointed that Nigeria was not at that meeting.
A: We have a Permanent representative at the UN, Prof Joy Ogwu. The
invitations Nigeria received are seven pages in all. I have them. You
won’t see that meeting in any of the invitations that we got. Nigeria
was not invited to that meeting and not scheduled to be there. With the
passion that our President has on the Boko Haram, do you think that he
will receive an invitation to a meeting that will discuss that issue and
he will not be there? The truth is that Nigeria was not invited. We
have said it and even the President has said in an interview before
leaving New York and I guess that should rest the matter. What is
happening, as far as I am concerned is storm in a teacup. A lot of
people just want to find faults unnecessarily. Nigeria was not invited
to that meeting, if she had been invited , she would have been there.
*Secondly, it was a meeting on Boko Haram and insurgency, there were
two high levels meetings within the General Assembly days and Nigeria
was at those meetings. It simply shows that she was not invited to the
earlier one. Let me make this statement: it’s like Nigerians have been
lied to so much that they find it difficult to now believe the truth.
And the truth is that Nigeria was not invited to that meeting.
Q: Even if the President was not invited , was the Nigerian delegation aware of that meeting?
A: How could the Nigerian delegation be aware, when it was not
scheduled? I have told you that every meeting that Nigeria was scheduled
to attend, I have the list here and that meeting was not there. Nigeria
was not scheduled for the meeting.
Q: What would have informed
the President's desire to want to become the Minister of Petroleum, when
he is talking about reforming the NNPC, making it transparent? Does he
not trust anyone or believe that there are capable people who can be
trusted to manage this ministry properly?
A: I think the
question, we will ask ourselves is: What would the President be bringing
to the table, if he is going to supervise the petroleum ministry? He
has been Minister of Petroleum for 31/2 years , that is a lot of
experience. Those were years that things were done fairly properly in
this country.
Q: A lot of people will say that things have
changed over the years and lots of structures have also changed and
those days may have gone….
A: But there are things that never
change in life. These include integrity, transparency, truth and
responsibility. Those things never change and those are the things the
President would bring to bear.
Q: In the newspaper review this
morning, it was reported that 21 names made the ministerial list. Now,
based on the constitution, a Minister must be selected from every state.
So, if the President wants to supervise the ministry of petroleum
resources, how will this work out eventually? Does this mean that a
particular state will have 2 slots?
A: The constitutional
requirement you quoted talks about the minimum , it states that there
must be 36 number of ministers, at least one from each state. We have
lived in this country where we had 46, 48 ministers and all that. That
already shows you that 36 is the minimum requirement but this
administration is one that wants to cut cost. We don’t expect that it
would have a ballooned number of ministers.
Q: What would you say
to Nigerians out there, who think that perhaps if some institutions are
working, talking of EFCC, ICPC and some other regulatory and
enforcement agencies, we won’t be talking about recycling of ministers
or minister of petroleum in the person of President Muhammadu Buhari.
A: What is wrong with recycling if that person has something he is
bringing to the table? Recycling would be wrong if that person is
adding no value. But if he is adding value, what is wrong with
recycling? I tell you that this is one appointment, if you can call it
so, that will bring a lot of value to that ministry.
Q: You said
earlier that the President is bringing in honour, integrity, truth all
those virtues into the ministry’s package. And the President has taken
over 3 months to appoint ministers. I wonder, has he not found a
Nigerian with all these qualities to run that office? We have seen in
this country, where a former president oversaw this sector and there was
not much difference.
A: Don’t forget that the buck stops at the
President’s table. At the end of his administration, it is going to be
called the Buhari administration and not the name of any Minister.
Therefore, it is very important that what the President feels would make
a difference in the country is what he does. At the end of the day,
that administration would be rated with his name and not any other name.
Q: The last words from you Mr. Adesina before you go
A:
Well, I will just like to say that Nigerians trusted this President,
they elected him into office, let them continue to maintain that trust,
and at the end of the day, they will not be disappointed.
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