Garba Shehu, Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to President Muhammadu Buhari has attributed insecurity and killings in the country to corrupt politicians.
He said that the politicians involved were those who no longer had access to loot public treasury.
NAN reports that Shehu made this known on Monday while speaking with newsmen.
Shehu said such politicians were bent on taking the shine out of the Buhari-led administration.
“The competition for power has become fiercer because the stakes are very high,” he said.
According to Shehu, Buhari was being attacked especially because he had unleashed on the country, a war against corruption.
This, he said, had never been so in the country, as access to public treasury for looting had been blocked.
The aide, however, said that the president was lucky because he had a judiciary which was transforming itself and was on the same page with him in fighting corruption.
“As I speak to you now, two former state governors are in jail; a lot of people thought that this war against corruption is a joke and that the back-and-forth that had characterised this over time, will continue.
“One of the two cases was determined after 11 years of back-and-forth between lawyers and Judges, kicking the ball from this court to that court.
“A lot of these harsh attacks against the president are coming from people who had become used to life style they cannot sustain.
“On record, there were people in this country, because they are influential, they had permanent suite in major hotels in Abuja where they leave lavishly at public expense.
“And, when they are leaving, they are accompanied with bags of Ghana-Must-Go,” he said.
Shehu added that the president had blocked access to national resources for lazy people, politicians, especially those who were fighting back, because they were not happy.
He said that the Buhari-led Federal Government was building infrastructure across the country.
According to him, there is no state in the country where a minimum of two federal roads are not being newly constructed or reconstructed.
“We have more electricity that cannot be consumed, 2,000 megawatts of electricity that nobody is taking.
“By the year ending, we are going to hit 10,000 megawatts from the 2,600 that we inherited,” he said, adding that government’s problem was how to sale and distribute electricity to those who needed it.
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