Osinbajo Gingers Civil Servants to stop praying and start working
As Nigeria faces an economic recession
and President Muhammadu Buhari is out of the country on sick leave (where
reports says he is getting better), the country’s vice-president has a clear
message for civil servants: Stop praying and start working.
Yemi Osinbajo, is a Christian pastor
himself, and currently the acting president of Africa’s most populous country
while Buhari recovers from illness in the U.K.
In an address to civil servants in the
capital Abuja Wednesday, Osinbajo urged Nigeria’s public workforce to rely on
their own efforts, and not their spiritual supplications, to improve the state
of the country.
“Great economies and great nations,
prosperity and abundance of nations and communities are created by men and not
spirits,” said Osinbajo, 60, who was a pastor of a church in Lagos before
taking public office.
“No matter how much you pray or fast
our country cannot grow without some of us deciding to do the hard work that
makes nations work.”
One of Africa’s biggest oil producers,
Nigeria is currently in an economic slump, hit hard by the global downturn in
commodity prices. That was compounded by resurgent militancy in 2016 in the
Niger Delta, the country’s main oil basin, which slashed production by half and
forced several international oil companies to temporarily cease operations. The
country has also experienced a crippling shortage of foreign exchange: The
current official exchange rate is $1 to 304 naira, but black market rates can
be much higher.
Nigeria has an embedded culture of corruption:
The country is ranked 136 out of 176 countries in Transparency International’s
annual index of corruption perceptions. The civil service has been tarnished by
accusations of widespread graft. In February 2016, the Nigerian government said
it had saved $11.5 million by removing 24,000 ghost workers from the civil
service payroll, after an audit found that many civil servants receiving a
salary did not respond to names on the accounts and some were receiving
salaries from multiple sources.
But workers in the public sector have
also suffered due to the country’s economic malaise, with government bodies
regularly failing to pay civil servants on time. Civil servants threatened to
go ahead with an indefinite strike earlier in May over unpaid promotions,
salaries and death remunerations totaling 200 billion naira ($635 million).
Osinbajo, a former government adviser
and attorney general, said he sympathized with civil servants not receiving
their salaries on time. But he urged the workers to cut down on inefficiencies
and work together to build up Nigeria.
“I understand the law of sowing and
reaping. It is a spiritual law that has tremendous physical implications,” said
Osinbajo. “Every time that we delay, or frustrate what we can do today leaving
it till tomorrow, we hold back the future, we too must reap what we have sown
by experiencing delays.”
President Buhari left Nigeria on May 7
to return to the U.K., where he had stayed for almost two months earlier in
2017 to receive medical treatment for a mystery illness. His absence has
coincided with rumors of a potential military coup in the country and has
caused many Nigerians to speculate about Buhari’s long-term health.
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