Okonjo-Iweala begged me not to say Nigeria was broke –Amaechi
The Minister of Transportation, Rotimi
Amaechi, has said a former Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, pleaded with him not to tell Nigerians that the country
was broke.
Amaechi, who said the country went into
recession under the administration of former President Goodluck
Jonathan, added that the previous administration covered up with the
excuse that the country was cash-strapped.
An online medium, The Cable, reported that Amaechi said this on the Osasu Show on Tuesday.
According to the report, Amaechi alleged
that Okonjo-Iweala, begged him to stop saying Nigeria was broke in
order not to drive away investors from the country.
Amaechi, who was the Chairman of the
Nigeria Governors Forum at the time, explained that the economy went
into a recession due to excessive borrowing.
He said, “People just pick up words without knowing what they mean. Even under Goodluck (Jonathan) we went into recession.
“I am one of those who participated in
the budget. We looked at what happened in the past and we discovered
that actually if recession means three times (three quarters of negative
economic growth), we have done more than the three times before we came
in.
“The difference is that while our
government is transparent and open, we are able to admit that, the
Federal Government was saying even to me as chairman of governor’s
forum, ‘Amaechi, don’t say that again’.
“If you remember as governor, I said we
were broke. The minister of finance came to my office in Abuja and
pleaded with me that I shouldn’t say it again. That if I said it, it
would affect Nigeria in terms of investment; that investors will run
away. That I shouldn’t say we are broke. I should say we are
cash-strapped. That was what Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told me.
“So, I knew as chairman of Nigeria
Governors’ forum, that we had gone into recession under Goodluck. I knew
as chairman of governor’s forum. And when I open my mouth to say it,
that we are broke, she spoke to me not to say it.”
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