12th May, 2015
PRESS RELEASE:
LONG
QUEUES AT FUEL STATIONS:
IS
SUFFERING JONATHAN’S PARTING GIFT?
The long queues at
filling stations all over the country which began about two weeks ago have
continued unabated. Travellers, particularly car owners, are stranded. Workers,
many of whom have not received their salaries since November last year, are
forced to trek long distances to reach their places of work.
Petrol is sold at exorbitant
prices in different parts of the country. Only the fuel stations belonging to
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) are selling at the normal
price (N87 per liter) and only those who can afford to sleep at the NNPC petrol
stations are buying there as the queues extend to kilometers on end. Prices in other filling stations
range from N300 to N140.
The impact on the
economy has been severe. Prices of foodstuffs have skyrocketed. There is
widespread hunger in the land. Traders blame increased prices on transporters
who charge more than 300% to bring goods to the city. Transporters are not even
trying to defend the hike in transport fare. They know Nigerians are not blind
and vehicles do not run on ordinary water.
The poor jamaheer (masses) who live in face-me-I-face-you
houses are the worst for it as they can no longer afford to buy fuel to operate
their I-pass-my-neighbour ‘toy’ generators. They are forced to stay awake sweating it out in this scorching heat
particularly now that it is evident that Jonathan’s power project has become a
mirage.
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) is perturbed by the
unending fuel crisis. We denounce the cluelessness which has greeted this
phenomenon for the past two weeks. What kind of system is the petroleum
ministry running for Allah’s sake? Why must petrol scarcity occur so repeatedly
that it becomes a regime’s middle name?
But the buck stops at
President Jonathan’s table. A visionary long-term plan for the regular supply
of fuel could have put paid to this mess. It is so bad now that Nigerians would
have taken to the streets but for the fact that they know Jonathan is on his
way out.
President Jonathan’s
record in governance is quite disturbing, if not scandalous. How do we explain
the untold suffering brought upon Nigerians through the present petrol
scarcity? It has affected all sectors, all disciplines.
Children going to
school; undergraduates and their lecturers who have to move from one
institution to another for research purposes; meetings, seminars and
conferences that have been scheduled which must now be rescheduled, etc. We
must not forget the six weeks postponement of the presidential election forced
on the nation by President Jonathan and its bandwagon effect on many other
programmes in the country.
We must ask President Jonathan: Where is fuel? Where is the
regular electricity supply which Jonathan promised us? It is just 18 days to
handing over and the total power supply has dropped to 2,800 megawatts for the
whole country. Why should we regret being Nigerians? Jonathan’s administration
is an unmitigated disaster.
MURIC demands immediate
end to the fuel crisis. President Jonathan is ending his tenure on a sad note
and with resounding failure. Mr. President is wasting our time and making us
suffer. This is the least we expect from an outgoing leader, unless suffering
is actually what he had planned all along as his parting gift for Nigerians.
We conclude this press
statement with a caveat. Nigerians must keep their eyes and ears wide open. The
ongoing fuel shortage may be another well rehearsed maneuver to scuttle the
transition. It may have been designed to shoot up our adrenalin glands, ready
to burst in the first month of the incoming Buhari administration.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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