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Festive Season: Ex-PDP Deputy Chair, Bode George tells Tinubu to reduce fuel price to N300
To celebrate Christmas and New Year with ease, the former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Chief Bode George has told President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to reduce the cost of fuel from N1,100 to N300 per litre, it will automatically crash the prices of essential commodities and services for the benefit of all.
The politician and elder statesman gave this counsel during an interactive session with journalists in Lagos on Wednesday, saying the price of petroleum which is currently above N1,000 per litre has made economic welfare of Nigerians worst.
He said, he was canvassing for this window of relief because Nigerians are going through hardship and this reduction should have a time frame which the people will enjoy this.
He said that the federal government, as well as well- meaning individuals and businesses, could bear the cost of such price slash to bring happiness to all Nigerians.
The PDP leader, who noted that December and January are special months, said that such gesture could start from the middle of December and run through January.
“I have been thinking, as a Nigerian, what can we do because the anger and the hunger are almost equal on the streets of Nigeria.
“What am I suggesting is that Mr President should sit down with his managers and give an order that from the middle of December to the end of January, the cost of petrol will be N300 per litre.
“The government can absorb the losses in the interest of the suffering people.
“If they (government) want others to contribute, let us know how much that is going to cost and ask people to donate, to bear the cost.
“We will be sending a lot of messages of happiness across the tribes and homes.
“Everybody in Nigeria will be happy because it will positively impact on this period of the year. It is a challenge and he (Tinubu) can do it.
“We need this in this December and January to put smiles on the faces of Nigerians, ” Mr George, a PDP Board of Trustees (BOT) life member, said.
Advising the president to take further measures to bring relief to the people, he said that the gesture would crash prices of essential commodities and services for the benefit of all.
He said that government’s efforts should be concentrated on reducing high inflation rate, unemployment, and poverty and youth restlessness in order to create a better future for Nigerians.
Speaking on the recent presidential election in Ghana, Mr George noted that Nigeria’s electoral system needed reforms to guard against electoral frauds and manipulations.
According to him, the nation will continue to grope for development if the system fails to encourage best candidates to emerge.
Stating that election must reflect the wishes of the people and be devoid of religious and tribal sentiments, Mr George said that Ghana election should be a wake up call for Nigeria.
“INEC performance must improve. The commission must make sure that the voice of the people is heard in elections.
“Electoral offenders should be made to face the music and sent to jail. We must be very firm about due process, credibility and transparency in elections,” he said.
Urging the president to revisit resolutions in the 2014 Constitutional Conference, Mr George said that the current constitution was not federal in principle and practice.
“We should not deceive ourselves, the constitution is a problem. It is a military constitution, it is not democratic,” he said.
Mr George called on the National Assembly to ensure devolution of powers and electoral reforms that would do away with manual collation of election results and mandate electronic transmission of election results from polling units.
Mr George disagreed with political watchers saying no vacancy in presidency in 2027.
On the dwindling strength of the former ruling party, Mr George, who noted that all organisations had its ups and downs, said that selfish interests and disregard for party rules remained PDP’s major challenge.
He said that PDP could bounce back and win presidential election if the leadership decided to elevate national interest above selfish interests and adhere to the party’s constitution.
“We will tell ourselves some serious old truth. We messed ourselves up,” he said.
Stating, however, that the PDP was not dead, Mr George said that lack of justice, equity, fairness and the inability to adhere to the party’s zoning and rotational principle cost the party victory in 2023.
Calling on the party’s founding fathers alive to wake up and rescue the party, Mr George said that Nigerians were still waiting for the former ruling party to take over power and put things right.