Obi warns Nigeria heading toward economic crisis

Former presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi, has criticised the administration of President Bola Tinubu over the country’s rising debt profile, warning that Nigeria is “heading to disaster.”
The African Democratic Congress chieftain made the remarks on Tuesday during the party’s national convention in Abuja.
According to him, the removal of petrol subsidy by the previous administration was intended to reduce borrowing and channel resources toward national development.
He however, argued that the current government has continued to increase borrowing despite maintaining the subsidy removal policy.
“When this government came into being, they removed subsidy on petroleum. The reason was to stop borrowing to service it and use the resources to develop the country.
”But today, despite that removal, the government has continued borrowing,” Obi said.
“The previous administration left a debt of about N87 trillion. Today, we are close to N200 trillion.
”That means they have borrowed over 130 per cent more, despite removing subsidy.
”At the same time, contractors are being owed, and no projects in the 2025 budget have been funded. We have huge debt and have borrowed more on everything. We are heading to disaster,” he added.
Obi said the figures were meant to highlight what he described as Nigeria’s economic drift, urging citizens to take collective responsibility.
“The reason I used these figures is to show that we are drifting. We all have to work hard and do whatever is possible. Anarchy consumes everybody.
”We must make sacrifices for the sake of our children. If we do not act, what is happening now will have consequences for us and future generations,” he stated.
The former Anambra State governor also stressed the need for national unity, warning that divisions across the country are deepening.
“We need to work as a united Nigeria. The country is so divided, and unity is important.
”The present government has ensured that we remain more divided. If we allow this to continue, it will get worse,” Obi said.
On security, he expressed concern over Nigeria’s worsening global terrorism ranking under the current administration.
“If you check the index today, when this government came into being, Nigeria’s ranking in terrorism was around 80.
”Today, we are number four. If this continues for another four years, we could become number one,” he said.
He also highlighted rising poverty levels, noting that more Nigerians are falling into extreme hardship.
“When this government came into being, our poverty rate was about 41.6 per cent, representing roughly 88 million people.
”Today, it is about 63 per cent, or 140 million people. That means the number has nearly doubled,” Obi added.



