President Muhammadu Buhari says the anti-corruption war is tough and grueling, with corruption fighting vigorously back, but assured that the battle would be won.
He spoke while meeting with US secretary of state, John Kerry, Wednesday, November 16, 2016 on the margins of conference on climate change, COP22, in Marrakech, Morocco. Buhari’s Special Adviser (Media and Publicity) Femi Adesina quoted him as saying that corrupt people had accumulated a formidable arsenal of illicit wealth, which they were now deploying against the government on diverse fronts.
“But it is a war we are determined to win, and which we will win,” President Buhari said. “People of goodwill are behind us, countries like America and many others are with us, and we will surely win.”
Adesina, in a statement issued on Thursday, said the president also updated Secretary Kerry on the war against insurgency in the North-East of Nigeria, efforts being made to tackle humanitarian problems caused by the insurgency, informing that a presidential committee had been launched “under Gen T.Y Danjuma, a man of high integrity.”
On the unrest in the Niger Delta area, which manifests in the sabotage of critical oil and power installations, President Buhari reportedly said the engagement process was proceeding apace, adding that it was rather difficult bringing the main protagonists of the insurgency under one umbrella.
The President also reportedly said Nigeria was happy with American support on different fronts, assuring that the economic challenges facing the country were being “frontally tackled, and we will overcome them soon.”
Adesina said that Kerry expressed delight at the many successes of the Buhari administration, pledging continued U.S. support in the bid to overcome security, humanitarian, political, and economic challenges.
“As the Barrack Obama administration exits next January, Kerry said he would love to continue engaging with Nigeria, even in a private capacity. He described President Buhari as a strong international partner in the battle against violent extremism,” Adesina wrote in the statement.
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