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How I’ll fight insecurity, boost economy – Tinubu

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All Progressives Congress, APC, presidential candidate, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and his New Nigeria Peoples Party, NNPP, counterpart, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, yesterday, outlined how they would change the fortunes of the country, if elected president, next year.
Specifically, Tinubu, who promised a continuous open door for collaboration, restated his plan to hit a double figure Gross Domestic Product, GDP, tackle insecurity, revive industries, rebuild Nigeria, promote agriculture, and stabilise power, among others.

The former Lagos State governor and Third Republic senator spoke at a Town Hall meeting with the business community and Organised Private Sector at Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos.

On his part, Kwankwaso, a former governor of Kano State, while presenting his 160-page manifesto in Abuja, said he will prioritise education by mopping up the 20 million out-of-school children in four years and make registration for secondary school certificate and Unified Tertiary Matriculation examinations free, among others.

He also promised to recruit 750,000 personnel into the military and increase the Police Force to one million personnel.

Tinubu and Kwankwaso spoke as two members of the Organised Private Sector, OPS, tasked the 18 presidential candidates for the 2023 election not to focus on paperwork or manifestos alone but adopt practical approaches to solve Nigeria’s problems in their campaigns.

How I’ll battle terror

On plans against insecurity, Tinubu said:  “We shall continue the fight against insecurity by redefining our counter-insurgency doctrine and practice. Our  response to terror, kidnapping and violent criminality will be defined by the following elements: We shall enlist more people in the armed forces, security services and the police; our forces will be given better tactical communications, mobility as well as improved aerial and ground surveillance capacity.

“Through these and other measures, we shall better  identify, monitor, track, and defeat these evil groups where they are. They shall have no respite until they surrender or are utterly defeated.”

At the the Town Hall session were APC running mate, Senator Kashim Shettima; Governors Babajide Sanwo-Olu (Lagos), Simon Lalong (Plateau),who is also the Director-General of the APC Presidential Campaign Council, Atiku Bagudu (Kebbi), Abdulrahman Abdulrasaq (Kwara), Abubakar Badaru (Jigawa), Dapo Abiodun (Ogun), Adegboyega Oyetola (Osun), Nasir El-Rufai (Kaduna), and Abdullahi Ganduje (Kano) and a host of other APC leaders and chieftains.

From the business community were President of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote; Mr. Jim Ovia, Chairman of Zenith Bank; Mr. Tony Elumelu, Chairman of UBA,; Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, former CEO of Access Bank; Herbert Wigwe, Group CEO of Access HoldCo and other business leaders representing sectoral groups, such as agriculture, oil and gas, trade, manufacturing, and creative sectors.

Laying out his action plan before the business leaders, Tinubu said having achieved similar economic success as Lagos State governor, he has the capacity to repeat the same at the national level as president.

His words: “Lagos is an appropriate venue for this meeting. You may have heard that I was once governor of this dynamic economic force. However, may I remind you that when I first entered office, Lagos was a different story.

“My team and I developed a blueprint, a master plan, for Lagos. I can say that plan has been largely successful.

“We turned this state into a safer, more prosperous place where people can go about any legitimate vocation or venture regardless of their ethnicity, religion, region or prior social station.

“We did more than open Lagos for business. We opened the door for all Nigeria to join and experience the decent things progressive democratic governance can bring.

“We were not perfect but we did a lot. In doing so, we worked hand in hand with the business community as partners sharing the same goals of prosperity and renewed hope. I now stand before you, seeking a bigger yet similar job.”

Tinubu urged the Lagos Business Community to join hands with him to achieve this, noting that a viable economy requires collaboration between the political and business communities.

He continued: “Nigeria stands at the threshold between indifference and greatness, prosperity and poverty, the future and the past.

“The door is ajar.  Together, let us open it so that we may cross over to the better side and secure for this beloved nation its finer destiny.

“The productive and beneficial things we seek do not lie in the sole domain of one sector. They reside in the cooperation between government and the private sector.

“I see no conflict  between the business community and government.   Yet, with equal conviction, I believe the private sector and government should constantly be at war.

“But they wage this battle not as  enemies. They must stand as inseparable allies combating the mutual enemies of scarcity, underdevelopment, joblessness and the fear these bad things breed.

“The pragmatic problem solving  and teamwork that improved Lagos, I want to bring to this nation.   I ask for your help as the task ahead is doable but also difficult.”

Now, Tinubu said that Nigeria needs to move from dependence on exporting its raw materials to nations who sell the finished products to us at exorbitant prices to one that refines its raw materials for upward export itself.

Building on Buhari’s achievements

Praising the President Muhammadu Buhari-led Administration for its patriotism and commitment, he itemised his administration plans to build on Buhari’s achievements.

These, he said include reviving dead industries, promoting agriculture, providing power, produce and use made in Nigeria goods, building infrastructure and most importantly improving the country’s security.

“From its very inception, our political economy has been imbalanced and in need of major reform.  Our political economy is much too dependent on the export of raw material or unfinished goods and the import of increasingly expensive finished products.   Over the course of time, gains from natural resource exports will prove largely insufficient to meet the rising costs of imports let alone support even the most basic demands of modern democratic governance. The time is now to cure this lapse, and time is of the essence for it does not wait for man or nation.

“We commend the work of prior administrations, especially the present government. This government has performed with patriotism and commitment during trying times. We simply must go farther and faster. My experiences in both the private sector and elective office afford me a special appreciation of the economic potency that close collaboration between government and the business community can bring.

“Allow me to share a few ideas that provide some insight into my vision for a more prosperous and secure nation where hope is renewed and despair rebuffed.

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