President Muhammadu Buhari said Nigeria just recovered from its worst recession in more than two years.
President Muhammadu Buhari, Thursday, said Nigeria had just
recovered from its worst recession in more than two decades.
According
to him, the rise in foreign private investments in Nigeria was as a result of
the success of his administration’s economic agenda.
Buhari
made this remark while speaking on Thursday at a meeting with a Qatari business
delegation led by the former Emir, Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani at the
State House, Abuja.
The
President described the Federal Government’s economic agenda as one designed to
move the country from over-reliance on crude oil and food importation.
Shehu
Garbia, Buhari’s Senior Special Assistant to President quoted him as saying
that the policy has, in the past two years turned Nigeria into one of the most
attractive investment destinations inAfrica.
According
to President Buhari, “My administration’s economic agenda has always been to
move away from over reliance on crude oil and food importation.Nigeria is a
blessed country. We have fertile land. We have young and energetic population.
And we have a very strong legal and regulatory system that protects capital and
investments, both local and foreign.
“As
you are aware, Nigeria just exited its worst recession in more than two
decades. We have more than doubled our foreign reserves. We are winning the war
against corruption. We are developing our infrastructure. And we are enforcing
the rule of law. As a result of this, we are seeing significant growth in the
non-oil sector which is creating thousands of jobs across the country.”
The
President cited the current strategic partnership between Moroccan and Nigerian
fertilizer companies as part of the success stories.
“Today,
due to this alliance, Nigeria has over 13 functioning fertilizer blending
plants with another four in the pipeline. This is purely driven by the private
sector,” he noted.
According
to President Buhari, “In 2017 alone, we saw significant commitments and
agreements by major global organisations in infrastructure projects such as:
the proposed USD 9 billion Dangote Refinery and Petrochemical complex in Lagos;
the completed USD 600 million Lafarge Plant in Calabar; the proposed rail
stock; the proposed USD 1.3 billion public private partnership with General
Electric on Rail Track Development and the proposed ENI/Agip rehabilitation of
Port Harcourt Refinery. You can see clearly that foreign private companies are
coming back to Nigeria and making massive investments within our existing legal
and regulatory frameworks.”
In
his remarks, Sheikh Al-Thani said that the global opinion on Nigeria as an
investment destination had been boosted by President Buhari’s strong standing
against corruption and adherence to the rule of law.
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