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Senate’s stance vindicates Buhari on inherited PDP loans – BMO

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The Buhari Media Organisation (BMO) has commended the Senate for shedding more light on salient issues on Nigeria’s debt profile estimated at N33 trillion.

The group said in a statement signed by its Chairman Niyi Akinsiju and Secretary Cassidy Madueke that the position of the upper legislative chamber that a large chunk of the debt burden was inherited is a confirmation of what it has always said about the national debt.

“It is gratifying to hear the Senate through the chairman of its joint committee on finance, local debt and banking and finance, Solomon Adeola, providing more clarity on concerns raised by some federal lawmakers over the country’s total debt profile.

“While many people continue to have a field day criticising the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration over its borrowing plan and the seemingly high debt servicing rate, the Senate is emphasizing that majority of the loans being repaid presently were accumulated from the times of the military through the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) years.

“It is against this background that we are reaffirming that the present administration inherited an accumulated national debt stock of 63billion dollars N23.9trillion which it has started to service even at a period of low revenue because government is indeed a continuum.

“So the debt profile has increased to 87billion dollars or N33trillion as at June 2021 because the All Progressives Congress (APC) led administration has added a debt of 24billion dollars or N9.1trillion to what it met on ground.

“But we make bold to say that even without the Buhari government adding anything to the inherited loan stock, the rising value of the dollar to the naira has automatically been driving up the Naira equivalent of the national debt,” it added.

BMO however, noted that the difference between the debt taken in the Buhari era and those accumulated in the PDP years was prudence and financial management.

“We noticed how the PDP and its sympathisers are always eager to play up the borrowing plan of the Buhari administration but what they are always silent about is what they left behind in May 2015.

“The former ruling party left a national debt of 63billion dollars, a Joint Venture (JV) cash call debt of 6.8billion dollars or N2.6trillion owed International oil companies (IOCs) and a debt owed local contractors running into trillions of naira.

“This was in spite of earning 381.9billion dollars or N144.7trillion from crude sales alone between 2010 and May 2015 but Nigerians still struggled to understand why the then PDP administration still racked up a debt of 63billion dollars with little or nothing to show for the huge funds generated.

“But any unbiased observer of the Buhari administration can easily see that the loans taken by this government are tied to specific projects including the Lagos-Ibadan railway project, the Abuja-Kaduna-Kano express way, airport expansion projects and the Second Niger Bridge, amongst others which have either been delivered or are taking shape.

“It is also clear that the fresh 4.9billion dollars loan request sent to the National Assembly for approval has an addendum showing 15 projects designed to touch all the six geo-political zones so Buhari-era loans are neither opaque nor meant for frivolities,” BMO said.

It added that all indices of Nigeria’s fiscal management since 1999 showed that there is more prudence under Buhari than previous administrations.

Ali Baba Inuwa

NEWSVERGE, published by The Verge Communications is an online community of international news portal and social advocates dedicated to bringing you commentaries, features, news reports from a Nigerian-African perspective. A unique organization, founded in the spirit of Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, comprising of ordinary people with an overriding commitment to seeking the truth and publishing it without fear or favour. The Verge Communications is fully registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as a corporate organization.

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