We have saved N2.2 trillion since I got into power - Buhari

We have saved N2.2 trillion since I got into power - Buhari

- Buhari said his govt has saved money since he introduced TSA

- Buhari said TSA is Goodluck Jonathan's idea

- He explained why he stopped the sale of foreign currency

We have saved N2.2 trillion since I got into power - Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari

Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari has revealed his administration had been able to plug leakages and save N2. 2 trillion through the Treasury Single Account (TSA).

Buhari revealed the reason when he spoke on the state of the economy during an interactive session with the Nigerian community in the United Kingdom on the sidelines of the supporting Syria conference in London.

READ ALSO: Read why The Economist called ex-president Goodluck Jonathan an ‘Ineffectual Buffoon’

The president said although the TSA was the initiative of the Goodluck Jonathan administration, the immediate past government did not make use of it.

“When we discovered that we were already in trouble, we tried to enforce the TSA. This government did not initiate it, it was the previous government, but it was so unpopular to the previous government,” he said.

“For its own reasons, it couldn’t impose it, but when we came and we found out that we were broke, we saw that this as the way to do it.

“We discovered that the NNPC had more than 45 accounts, the ministry of defence and the military had more than 70 accounts; tell me which of the accounts to trace every year. “So we enforced TSA, we said there must be TSA, and let me tell you by the end of December coming to January this year, last month we mopped up more than N2.2 trillion.”

He also revealed why his government stopped the sale of foreign exchange to bureau de change (BDC) operators.

He said the sale was stopped due to fraudulent acts perpetrated by some directors of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

READ ALSO: Okonjo-Iweala calls Falana integrity-challenged charlatan

“We found out that some directors of CBN owned bureau de change and when foreign exchange comes, they take it to their bureau de change and give government the change,” he said.

“We had to stop the federal government giving bureau the change. I am explaining this to give a tip of the ice berg of the problem we inherited. We are getting so hard because we have no other [option] than to make everybody accountable.”

Meanwhile, the federal government’s anti-corruption war has been extended to 81 government agencies, News Agency of Nigeria is reporting.

The agencies, which are revenue generating will undergo forensic audit following the approval of the National Economic Council (NEC) yesterday, Thursday, January 28 in Abuja.

 

Source: Legit.ng

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