Presidential spokesman Daniel Bwala says the constant comments by UK Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch against Nigeria won’t have any effect on the country.

Badenoch recently renewed her onslaught against Nigeria.

While delivering her first speech of the year at an event organised by Onward, a British think tank producing research on economic and social issues, the Nigerian-born politician said she did not want Britain to be like Nigeria where she claimed the government had failed.

But speaking during an appearance on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily, Bwala said the UK Conservative Party leader’s comment was to gain the favour of her party.

Your rhetoric encouraging ethnic violence,  Onoh tells Omokri

‘Nigeria destroys lives’, Kemi Badenoch fires fresh shot

Bwala said: “The only problem we have with Kemi, I think, is the rhetoric because Kemi belongs to the right base in the United Kingdom which is what you see in this populism around the world that you can deepen on your support system if you can feed off of the anger of the people.

“And so she’s building a rhetoric of denigrating Nigeria, demarketing in Nigeria, so she can probably win the acceptance or acceptation of the rights in her party. And that to me is counterproductive because if you look at Rishi Sunak, he is also of Indian origin. There has been this issue of gang rape in India.

“He has never used that as a weapon to promote what he believed to be a departure from what is likely to be believed as hereditary or history of the Indian people, but she has always denigrated Nigeria.”

He, however, dismissed fears that Badenoch’s remarks about Nigeria will affect the country’s efforts to bring investors.

“I don’t think it would have an effect because she’s not the government in power. Usually, these international relationships or collaborations are dealings between governments. Because she’s not the government in power, it will not have any effect.

“Secondly, because she’s a Nigerian, investors will be smart enough to access what she’s saying, whether it is born out of rhetoric,” he said.