We’ll Do Everything Within Our Powers To End Insecurity - Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari says his administration is ready to use everything within its powers to end insecurity
in the country and bring perpetrators of criminal activities to book.
The President, who spoke on Tuesday
at a dinner with members of the National Assembly, held at the State House
Conference Centre, Abuja, said ‘‘insecurity, manifesting as insurgencies,
banditry, kidnapping and urban crime of all sorts is the single most difficult
challenge we face today.’’
He expressed concern that insecurity
had inhibited the government’s ability to build infrastructure, provide the much
needed social services to the people, and to attract investments that drive
innovation, create industries, and provide jobs and create wealth.
‘‘Some of the people who perpetuate
these various manifestations of insecurity do so for profit, others, in the
name of discredited ideologies.
‘‘Whatever their motivations may be,
their actions are an existential threat to our country.
‘‘In the circumstances, we must do
everything within our power, without consideration of distractions, to put an
end to their activities and bring them to book.
‘‘We cannot allow ourselves to be
distracted from this objective, or waver in our commitment, and I am confident
that together we will triumph in our present efforts,’’ he said.
President Buhari also used the
occasion to hail the ninth National Assembly for discharging their legislative
duties with maturity and competence, describing the legislature as ‘‘full
partners in national development.’’
He particularly commended the
minority parties in the legislature for their cooperation and support for
Government programmes.
‘‘Our ability to govern in the best
interests of the Nigerian people depends to a great deal on effective
collaboration and partnership between the Legislature and the Executive.
‘‘The obligation to check and
balance each other is not an invitation to conflict, and it should not be
characterised by quarrelsome disagreement when consultation, engagements and
compromise have proven time and again to be a more effective approach.
‘‘In the 9th Assembly, you have
distinguished yourselves by your conduct in office, by the scale and quality of
your legislative interventions, and by your capacity for engaging with the
difficult questions facing the country with maturity and competence,’’ he said.
The President listed some
legislative accomplishments of the ninth assembly ranging from returning of our
budget cycle to January to December, the amendment of the Companies and Allied
Matters Act (CAMA), the Nigeria Police Act, the Finance Act, the Deep Offshore
Production Sharing Contract Act, amongst others.
Commending the leadership of the
National Assembly under Senate President Ahmad Lawan and Speaker of the House
of Representatives Femi Gbajabiamila for their dedication through challenging
times, the President told the legislators:
‘‘You have also succeeded in
overcoming the political and other obstacles that have, for two decades,
inhibited the much-needed reforms of our Oil and Gas industry, resulting now in
the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB).
‘‘I congratulate you all, and thank
you for your contributions to the difficult, yet necessary task of nation
building.’’
The President noted that the
executive and legislature came into office at a time of significant challenges
for the country.
‘‘Overcoming these challenges
require that we finally confront long ignored questions of economics, politics,
law and history that are often at the root of our national problems.
‘‘This moment in history requires us
to make hard choices, take difficult decisions and act with diligence and
patriotism to ensure that our country can survive and thrive long after we have
all left.
‘‘What this means in effect is that
our jobs will not get any easier. However, the objectives we seek, and will
work together to achieve, deserve our best efforts regardless the sacrifice,’’
he said.
As the second legislative year of
the 9th Assembly has just come to an end, the President noted that it was
appropriate to jointly review shared commitments, to identify what has been
achieved, and what is still left undone.
‘‘This way, we can prioritise
activities and allocate the resources necessary to ensure that in the lifetime
of this Assembly, and of the administration, we can complete the work we have
started, and leave behind a record of achievement that will stand all of us in good
stead in the assessment of history,’’ he said.
The President said he looked forward
to continued collaboration and partnership between the Executive and
Legislative arms of government, working together to achieve a shared vision of
a peaceful and prosperous country.
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