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Buhari has created the largest wave of poverty in human history – Atiku

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Buhari govt. creating largest wave of poverty in human history - Atiku

Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, on Saturday said the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari is creating the largest wave of poverty in human history.

Atiku, who also insisted that the greatest threat to the security of the country in 2019 is not the Boko Haram/ISWAP insurgency but  the growing wave of poverty, stated this in his reaction to the recent report by the United Nations Development Programme, UNDP, indicating that over 98 million Nigerians were living in multi-dimensional poverty.

According to the former VP who was the presidential candidate if the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the last general elections, the report indicated that poverty had become the fastest growing venture in Nigeria over the last four years.

In a statement issued by his media adviser, Paul Ibe, Atiku insisted that there was an urgent and compelling need for institutions of the Nigerian state to understand that it was an appalling dereliction of duty to stand idly by and allow misery multiply in the populace.

According to him, this was no longer a grassroots problem.

He said: “The failure of our economy over the last four years affects everyone from top to bottom. Four years ago, Aliko Dangote, Nigeria’s richest man, was worth $25bn. However, his net worth in 2019 is less than half that. He joined thousands of industrialists whose wealth and their ability to produce, had eroded in recent years, and continue to do so.

Read also: I know politicians who have suddenly become billionaires with public funds

“With the National Bureau of Statistics reporting a net job loss of over six million since 2015, we see that if industrialists have their wealth eroding, it affects their ability to create opportunities, which means that the trickle-down effect gradually dries.”

Atiku further warned that the world was noticing, hence Foreign Direct Investment was shifting from Nigeria to Ghana, making Ghana the top recipient of FDI in West Africa in the last year.

He said: “And in the wake of this report by the UNDP, we are greeted with nonchalance by those who led us into this crisis. It is as though they think that as long as they and their families are not amongst those 98 million extremely poor Nigerians, things can carry on as before.

“But that cannot be allowed to be the case. Those who have the ability, including the Council of State, all former leaders, elder-statesmen, and especially the other arms of government, must begin to collaborate for solutions, before the number increases from 98 million, to all 198 million Nigerians.

“We must remember that we are stakeholders in the Nigerian project; stakeholders who must speak up for those 98 million people who are losing their voices to poverty.”

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