Atiku Abubakar, former vice-president of Nigeria, says loans borrowed by the present Bola Tinubu administration are “bone-crushing to Nigerians”.

 

The senate and the house of representatives approved a $2.2 billion loan request from Tinubu earlier on Thursday.

 

Reacting to the development in a statement, Abubakar said Nigerians are being crushed by a blend of the administration’s “failed trial-and-error policies and loan rackets”.

 

“These Tinubu’s loans are bone-crushing to Nigerians and bringing insufferable pressure on the economy, especially when they are not properly negotiated and utilized,” he said.

 

Abubakar said the recent report released by the World Bank identifying Nigeria as the third most indebted country to the International Development Association (IDA) “is very concerning”.

 

“This report is coming just when the government has already sent a proposal to the National Assembly signalling an intention to borrow an additional N1.7tn being shortfall in the 2024 budget through Euro Bonds,” he said.

 

“What makes this particular loan proposal even more concerning is that it is benchmarked at the exchange rate of 1 USD to N800, whereas the current exchange rate from the Central Bank of Nigeria stands at over N1,600 to 1 USD.”

 

The former vice-president said the country is “sinking further in debt, and the national assembly has become an accomplice once more”.

 

“Tinubu had, in July this year, boasted that the FIRS and Customs under his watch have collected all-time high revenues to finance the Budget,” Abubakar said.

 

“Why then are they still borrowing? There is something that they are not telling Nigerians, even as they are being crushed by a combination of their failed trial-and-error policies and loan rackets.

 

Abubakar also expressed concern that the voracious appetite for “humongous loans” is powered by “corruption and not for infrastructure and development needs”.

 

“A report by Budgit, a budget watchdog, has disclosed that the 2024 Budget is a mess because of the level of pork associated with it,” Atiku said.

 

“I feel a sense of personal agony seeing that just a few years after the administration of President Obasanjo took our country out of foreign indebtedness, we are today back at the top spot in the same conundrum.”


He said it is time for the country to apply more caution and “arithmetic to the loan frenzy’.