President Muhammadu
Buhari has thanked UK Prime Minister, Theresa May for the effort of the British
government towards the training of the Nigerian Army in the fight against Boko
Haram insurgents.
Buhari on Monday held a
bilateral meeting with UK Prime Minister, Theresa May at 10, Downing Street,
London.
The President told the
Prime Minister that, “We campaigned on three major issues; to secure the
country, revive the economy and fight corruption.
“We have elections next
year, politicians are already preoccupied with the polls, but I am bothered
more about security and the economy,” he stressed.
Recalling that Nigeria
and Britain have a long history of cooperation on several fronts, President
Buhari stated: “People ought to know how they arrived where they are, if they
would move forward. It was a mistake for us to have stopped the teaching of
history as a subject in schools, but we are returning it to the curriculum now.
He commended British
companies “who have stood with Nigeria through thick and thin. Even when we
fought a Civil War, they never left.
“But like Oliver Twist,
we ask for more investments. We are encouraging more British companies to come
to Nigeria. We appreciate the support you have given in training and equipping
our military, particularly in the war against insurgency, but we want to also
continue to work with you on trade and investment.
President Buhari
briefed Prime Minister May on the strides in agriculture, which he said has put
Nigeria firmly on the road to food self-sufficiency.
“I am very pleased with
the successes in agriculture,” he said, adding that, “We have cut rice
importation by about 90%, made lots of savings of foreign exchange, and
generated employment. People had rushed to the cities to get oil money, at the
expense of farming. But luckily, they are now going back to the farms. Even
professionals are going back to the land. We are making steady progress on the
road to food security.”
On education, President
Buhari said more investment was being made, because, “people can look after
themselves if well educated. In this age of technology, education is very
important. We need well-staffed and well-equipped institutions to move into the
next generation.
Climate change and
environmental issues also came up for discussion, and President Buhari brought
up the necessity of inter-basin water transfer from Congo Basin to Lake Chad.
According to him: “The
Lake Chad is now about 10% of its original size, and it is perhaps one of the
reasons our youths dare both the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean, to get to
Europe. But if there is inter-basin water transfer, about 40 million people in
Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, Chad, and other countries stand to benefit. I made
the case during the Climate Change Summit in France. If Lake Chad is recharged,
it will reduce the number of youths coming to Europe to increase social
problems. We brought back about 4,000 people from Libya recently. Almost all of
them were below 30, and Libya was not their final destination. They were headed
to Europe.”
Credit: Daily Post
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