How Nigeria Can Repay Its Debts Within 90 Days – Jimoh Ibrahim

by Mercy Ulasi
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Jimoh Ibrahim, a senator-elect and successful businessman, has outlined how Nigeria may pay off its debts within 90 days.
Ibrahim suggested that the Nigerian government contact five EXIM institutions to obtain a loan equal to five times the country’s present debt.

The lawmaker-elcet offered this bit of counsel on Tuesday during an appearance with Politics Today on Channels Television.
I can give you a plan that will force you to repay your debts in 90 days, he added. Simply give five EXIM banks a call, including China EXIM bank.

“Take a loan about five times whatever you are owing currently, do a bridge gap financing, and then pay off what you are owing. Then you will have a surplus, do a repayment programme for 40 years and then have an honorarium period of 10 years and you are out of the debt.”

The described Boko Haram as a political problem, asking the President to return Nigerian troops back to their barracks.

He said, “Boko Haram is a political problem. You have to socialise politically to solve Boko haram. The first thing Mr President has to do is to withdraw soldiers from the front(line) and return them back to the barracks.

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“Children that left NDA as a lieutenant, they have become major-general and the war is still there. Is the military a challenge to ourselves? No,” he said.

Ibrahim said the military has been deploying a conventional strategy to approach unconventional war.

He blamed the alleged failure in the fight against terrorism on the strategy deployed by the authorities in the Northeast.
According to Ibrahim, Nigeria has spent a whopping $1.2 trillion fighting insurgency within the last 10 years.

He said, rather than deploying troops to the theatre of operations, the Nigerian government should “look for information gathering, socialization, you need to meet stakeholders, you have to do meetings.”

Speaking on the way forward, however, Ibrahim advised President Bola Tinubu to “go into political socialization. You have to socialise domestically. Assuming you have spent 10 per cent of $1.2 trillion on political socialisation, Boko Haram would have disappeared.

“But you spent 89 per cent on a factor that is not significant to confront Boko Haram, Boko Haram will still be there.”

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