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Presidency slams Afenifere faction over Tinubu mid-term criticism

Published 2 days ago3 minute read

The Presidency on Tuesday refuted criticisms by a faction of the Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, which claimed that the administration’s policies have resulted in economic hardship, democratic decline, and social regression.

A statement signed by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Public Communications, Sunday Dare, described the group’s assessment as “deceitful,” “prejudiced,” and “not grounded in facts.”

The statement is titled ‘Response To Afenifere Faction’s Deceitful Statement On President Bola Tinubu’s Mid-term’.

Dare maintained that the Tinubu-led administration has made notable progress in stabilising the economy, strengthening democratic institutions, and implementing far-reaching reforms under its Renewed Hope Agenda.

“A balanced assessment based on available data reveals a more objective and progressive picture, with significant achievements amid the challenges expected from a country like Nigeria with decades-old problems,” Dare stated.

The Presidency’s reaction comes days after the factional Afenifere, in a widely circulated statement, accused the Tinubu administration of worsening human development indices, mismanaging the economy, and eroding democratic freedoms.

The group had labelled the President’s key reforms—such as fuel subsidy removal and naira floatation—as “unforced errors” that had deepened poverty and unrest.

But in Tinubu’s defence, Dare argued that these policies were necessary to stop the bleeding of public finances and build a sustainable future.

According to him, the removal of the fuel subsidy saved the government over $10bn in 2023, while exchange rate unification boosted foreign reserves and helped Nigeria record an N18.86tn trade surplus.

He also cited improvements in inflation control, foreign direct investment commitments, and debt service-to-revenue ratios as evidence that the economy is stabilising.

On the social front, the Presidency listed several interventions including the cash transfer programme reaching 5.7 million households, NELFUND student loans, and a raised NYSC allowance from N33,000 to N77,000.

Other highlighted achievements included the disbursement of palliatives to states, the rollout of CNG buses, revitalisation of over 1,000 primary health centres, and training for 150,000 youths under the Three Million Technical Talent programme.

Addressing Afenifere’s claim that corruption was festering under Tinubu, Dare pointed to the suspension of a cabinet minister over mismanagement, the EFCC’s 4,111 convictions in 2024, and the forfeiture of high-value assets, including a 725-unit estate handed over to the Ministry of Housing in May.

On democratic governance, the Presidency dismissed claims of creeping authoritarianism, noting that the judiciary had upheld opposition victories in recent elections.

 “What is excused backstage will not be excused under the spotlight,” said Dare, quoting a widely-shared maxim.

The Presidency concluded with a call for collective responsibility in nation-building and an appeal to political actors to work with the administration in fighting disinformation, stabilising the economy, and delivering lasting change.

Origin:
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Punch Newspapers
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