Foreign Trips Key To Buhari’s Policies – Lai Mohammed

Buhari (2)

President Muhammadu Buhari has made over ten foreign trips in less than seven months and has become a subject of criticism because of this. But the Minister of Information and Culture, AlhajiĀ Lai Mohammed, has stressed the importance of the trips.

According to him, the trips are critical to the implementation of the key policies of Buhariā€™s administration which includes enhancing security, jump-starting the economy, creating jobs and fighting corruption.

ā€Nigerians, whether in the ruling or the opposition parties, have a right to ask questions about the activities of their President, but it is absolutely important that they do so from an informed, rather than partisan or sensational, standpoint,ā€ he said in a statement on Friday.

The Minister explained that most of the Presidentā€™s trips ā€“ to Nigeriaā€™s neighbouring countries of Benin, Cameroon, Chad and Niger, as well as to Germany, the US, France and the UN ā€“ were devoted to rallying regional and global support for the war against terrorism.

ā€He was in Germany at the invitation of the G7 to solicit support from the Industrialized Nations for the war against terrorism. No one who has witnessed the killings and maiming in the past seven years by Boko Haram will call such trips frivolous. After all, the security andĀ welfare of the citizens are the reason for the existence of any government.

ā€The Presidentā€™s visit to South Africa was to attend the regular summit of the African Union; the trip to Ghana was aimed at fostering better relations with a brotherly country; the trip to India was for the India-Africa summit that provided the opportunity to explore waysĀ of enhancing Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) from Indian investors, while the trip to Iran was to attend the forum of Gas Exporting Countries, a veritable platform for discussing how to better harness Nigeriaā€™s abundant gas resources for industrial/domestic consumption
and export, at a time of dwindling oil prices.

ā€The President also travelled to Malta to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, from where he travelled to Paris for the UN Conference on Climate Change. The Presidentā€™s second trip to South Africa since assuming office is for the China-Africa forum. On the few
occasions that the President has embarked on a State Visit, he has tied that to an agenda that will further the quest for support for the war against terror and the efforts to enhance FDIs, thus stimulating economic growth and creating jobs,ā€the Minister said.

ā€President Buhari is well respected on the global stage for his high integrity, his transparency, his patriotism and his purposeful leadership. It is important to leverage this respect in such a wayĀ that Nigeria can become a major player, either in the realms of economy or global diplomacy,ā€ the Minister said.

He said the President had embarked on the trips under a very stringent budget, cutting his delegations to numbers far below what his Ā predecessors used to travel with, while even the trimmed entourage hadĀ received reduced allowances on the occasions that the host governments have provided accommodation and feeding.

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