Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai has said that he is wishing that Nigeria's oil dries up, describing it as "easy money".
He
said the huge revenue generated from oil is the reason successive governments
in the country were not innovative.
He
stated this in Ibadan on Saturday, September 9, while speaking at the 2017 Town
Hall Meeting/Founder’s Day celebration, in memory of renowned economist,
Professor Ojetunji
Aboyade.
The
Governor said when the oil wells dry up, the government and Nigerians will
become serious about developing the country.
He
said: "Because Nigeria gets easy money from oil, the nation has lost
its thinking initiative on how to develop other sources of revenue and
diversify the economy.
"We
get easy money, we do not collect taxes and our taxes are six per cent of Gross
Domestic Product; that is an average of 21per cent. We stop respecting the
intellectuals that we have in our universities because we get easy money.
"This
is very sad, I wish the oil will dry up so that we can begin to use our brains
because we have stopped using our brains and we have stopped respecting
intellects because of easy money."
El-rufai
also described security in the country as inadequate, giving credence to a
general opinion that Nigeria is under-policed.
He
added: "It is obvious that Nigeria is severely under-policed, and will
require more personnel, intelligence assets, better training, technology and
equipment for its security agencies for the country to be a credible guarantor
of security.
"Even
if these were to be available, it is also debatable whether a single
centralised policing system, structure and staffing for 200 million citizens is
viable in a diverse, multi-lingual, multi-cultural and multi-ethnic nation like
Nigeria."
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