WHY STABLE POWER SUPPLY IS STILL ELUSIVE – BUHARI

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President Muhammadu Buhari has attributed the inability of the Federal Government to provide stable power supply to sabotage and theft of gas by unscrupu­lous Nigerians.

 

To address the situation, the President has resolved to reorgan­ise the existing Military Task Forces to protect gas pipelines across the country.

 

During a question-and-answer interactive session with the Nigeri­an community in Tehran, Iran on Tuesday, Buhari said that “although some improvements in power sup­ply had been recorded in the recent period, sabotage of pipeline installations continued to be a major hin­drance”.

 

According to him, Nigeria has everything it takes to generate enough power, adding that “power is a running battle because the sab­oteurs are still there. We have the potential. We have the gas, we have qualified people but we are contend­ing with a lot of saboteurs who go and blow up installations. When gas is pumped to Egbin and such oth­er power stations, thieves and sabo­teurs such as the militants cut those supplies.”

 

He also cited another factor as the reduced role of the government in the sector due to the privatisation of the institutions under the Pow­er Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN, in the process of which, he said, the facilities “have been sold to a number of interest groups.”

 

He assured that the Military Task Forces with representation from the Army, Navy, Air Force, the Police and other security agen­cies will be reconstituted to secure the pipelines. “Supplies will become steady; there will be less sabotage as we secure the pipelines,” he stressed.

 

President Buhari also updated the Nigerians in Tehran on the ef­forts of his administration towards ending the Boko Haram insur­gency and terrorism in the coun­try, explaining that a lot had been achieved following the reorganisa­tion of the military’s top command, followed by increased equipment supply and training.

 

In a response to a question on the need to improve healthcare de­livery, the President said that ef­forts had been intensified towards ridding the country of fake drugs and fake doctors, and also what he called “the disgraceful aspects” manifested by “baby factories.”

 

He also enumerated several steps being taken towards the re­vival of education from primary school level to university. On the creation of jobs, he placed the pre­vailing joblessness in the country at the doorstep of the last adminis­tration which he blamed for giving “a devastating blow to the econo­my through corruption and incom­petence.”

 

The President said that some­thing urgent will be done about the bad condition of roads, citing the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway as one to be addressed from next week by the Minister of Works, Power and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who sat next to him at the meeting.

 

Buhari also disclosed that some treasury looters, who he didn’t name in Jonathan’s administration, have started returning stolen funds to the government.

 

The President explained that the prosecution of suspected cor­rupt persons would have been on by now but for the need to thor­oughly investigate them and gath­er adequate evidences for their trial.

 

He said it was easy for him dur­ing his tenure as a military Head of State in1985 to quickly jail such per­sons while they prove their inno­cence, whereas current realities of the rule of law and due process have slowed him down in prosecuting corrupt persons this time around.

 

The Nigerian Charge D’Affairs in Iran, Dr. Ali Magashi, told the President that Nigerians in the country were law abiding, although a few are in prison for drug offences.

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