The Presidency on Sunday said Nigerians reserve the right to peaceful protest.
It also said President Bola Tinubu’s administration is poised to serve Nigerians, not “dominate” them.
Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale, who spoke during a TVC interview programme, Politics on Sunday with Femi Akande, was addressing concerns about the government’s stance on peaceful protests planned for August 1-10.
He said, “Let me be clear: we are not in office to dominate our people; we are here to serve them”.
He emphasised that no organ of the administration “has the authority” to prevent Nigerians from protesting.
“No one in our administration has the authority to deny Nigerians their right to peaceful protest,” Ngelale said, acknowledging fears surrounding a potential hijack of the protests similar to the #EndSARS movement of 2020.
He also reassured citizens of Tinubu’s commitment to putting Nigeria on a sound economic footing, despite the liabilities inherited from the past administration.
Ngelale reasoned that though Nigerians are facing intense economic pressures, the administration is working in the short, medium and long terms to improve living standards.
However, he sued for patience saying development takes time and there is no magic wand to solve the country’s problems overnight.
The presidential spokesperson highlighted the FG efforts including single-digit interest rate credit facilities for over one million MSMEs, the reconstruction of seaports and roads nationwide, the Student Loan Scheme, the Consumer Credit Program, and the increase in the national minimum wage, stressing that some of these efforts may take time to yield tangible results.
“Right now you have over 300 roadways across all states of the Federation being reconstructed and that is not including the super-highway from Lagos to Calabar that’s under construction, the Badagry to Sokoto highway and many others. Not to talk of $1bn being right now expended on seaport reconstruction across the eastern and western seaports.
“There are several things that are going on now that create direct employment and set us up for a prosperous future where our infrastructure actually supports the foreign direct investment drive that this President is aggressively pursuing.
“But it is also incumbent upon our administration, not just at the federal level, but obviously incumbent on the state and local levels, to ensure that whatever policies are being implemented to create fiscal space for households, that these things are actually done, that we don’t have any kind of administrative incompetence, that we don’t have unnecessary bureaucratic delays,” he explained.
Citing several social investment programmes already in motion, Ngelale argued, “There’s no question about the fact that there is a lot of work that has to be done and there’s a lot of work that is being done, some of which is not going to have the bells and whistles of TV cameras and nobody’s going to be sitting in the office, for example of the CBN Governor, as he’s doing his paperwork which leads to the full payoff of $7bn worth of foreign exchange backlog.
“It has a massive impact on investor confidence, it has massive impact on the medium term kind of monetary space in the country, but that’s not something that people are necessarily going to be dancing and celebrating about. So there’s a lot going on.”
He described a recent Supreme Court judgement that granted local government councils fiscal autonomy as “restructuring in practice,” adding, “That is the kind of thing that Nigerians would need to give some time to see what the difference actually will translate into in terms of the impact on their livelihoods.” (Punch)