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Atiku Abubakar |
Atiku stated this while reacting to the recent report by the United Nations Development Programme, published on July 11, which said that over 98 million Nigerians were living in multi -dimensional poverty.
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.
Atiku stated that the greatest national security threat Nigeria faced in 2019 was not Boko Haram/ ISWAP or bandits but the ‘creation of the largest wave of poverty in human history in the country.’
He 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.
“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.