”Stop comparing Obasanjo/Atiku’s tenure with Buhari administration – PDP lambasted back at APC


On Sunday, the Peoples Democratic Party, announced that the All Progressives Congress, APC, don’t have the parameter to compare the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo and that of President Muhammadu Buhari.

The party made this remark in response to APC’s claim that ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar acknowledged that Obasanjo administration was myopic and failed to expand Nigeria’s economy.

Mallam Lanre Issa-Onilu, APC’s spokesperson, 
had made this known in a statement where he applauded Atiku Abubakar for proposing on how Buhari should improve country’s economy.

Well, the former ruling party rebuke the ruling party for its statement, asserting that APC has “reversed all our national gains in a space of five years.”

The disclosed this in a statement titled: “You Lack Parameters to Compare Obasanjo/Atiku Tenure with Buhari’s”

However, the statement was signed by Kola Ogbondiyan, its spokesperson and it reads: 

“Our attention has been drawn to a knee-jerk reaction by the dysfunctional APC to the well-received suggestions by former Vice President and PDP’s candidate in the 2019 Presidential election, Atiku, on how to revamp our ailing economy.

“While the PDP had chosen not to allow the fizzling APC to distract us from our focus, particularly in finding solutions for the COVID-19 pandemic, we cannot keep quiet and allow those who had reversed all our national gains in a space of five years, to continue to engage in distortions, outright lies and appropriation of projects executed by the PDP to continually spit on the memories of Nigerians.

“It is sad that a patriotic and non-partisan rescue effort by Atiku was met with insults, animus and aspersions by an administration under which Nigeria is collapsing economically, just because it lacks the required competence and brilliance for modern governance.

“This is a government under which our nation has become the poverty capital of the world; our foreign debts have quintupled from $7 billion in 2015 to $30 billion today; our once highly rated banking sector is now shedding its workforce.”



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