Gov on Bokoharam, N2tr lost, 20,000 killed, two million displaced in Borno.
Borno State yesterday counted its losses to the Boko Haram insurgency that has ravaged the state for the sixth year running.
In financial terms, up to $6 billion (N2
trillion) has gone down the drains , about 20,000 people killed and
two million others displaced,Governor Ibrahim Shettima said on the
second and final day of the First National Economic Forum organised by
The Nation in Lagos.
In an emotion-laden documentary on the
Boko Haram terror which moved participants at the forum to tears,
Shettima detailed the massive carnage and destruction of property in the
state.
He said the $6 billion financial losses
do not include losses incurred by local and international businesses
located in the capital city, Maiduguri. He said before the insurgency, a
branch of one of the tier one banks in Maiduguri was processing over a
billion naira daily, the biggest cash centre in the country.
Despite the challenges in the state,
Shettima gave hope of creating a new Borno State. He showed the immense
reconstruction activities going on in the state where the displaced
persons will be rehabilitated.
He said he has started to redevelop
education by motivating pupils through feeding. He cited a school with
enrollment of less than 100 pupils but when he introduced feeding there,
the enrollment jumped to over 700.
He said his state has the second largest
land mass in country, therefore, has enough land for farming but
regretted that the state known for its huge agricultural potential with
prosperous farmers, has become a shadow of its self with former big
time farmers turning to beggars.
He noted that there is a direct
correlation between poverty and insurgency, youth unemployment and
insurgency, militancy in the Niger Delta and lack of skill and
unemployment.
On how he intends to rebuild the once
thriving economy of the state, Shettima said he is working on improving
the quality of governance by increasing education enrollment as
education is a leveler and an equal opportunity instrument.
“Our government has increased funding
for education and made it free and compulsory. From practical experience
and findings from on-the-spot assessment of our visits to schools,
there were large school drop-outs due to poor feeding and paucity of
infrastructure especially for the girl-child. We have also introduced a
model transportation system that has encouraged more parents to send
their children to school as against what we had before,” he added.
The governor said he is currently
building three model schools and hospitals in every senatorial zone to
stimulate the infrastructure upgrade that would improve the growth and
development of the state.
Shettima also said his administration is
investing in the health care sector to reverse the present situation
where millions of dollars are wasted yearly by Nigerians seeking medical
attention overseas. The idea is to harness our resources that would
take care of health requirements locally without visiting India or any
other place in Europe he said.
He criticized the rate of corruption in
the country and berated Nigerians that stole so much and invested their
loot outside the country to develop other nations to the extent of
stealing funds meant for the army to fight insurgency. He called it
immoral and the height of wickedness against ones kinsmen and the nation
in general.
On how to rebuild the state power
generation outside grid supply, the governor said the state is investing
in solar power equipment such as panels and will have in place a solar
power plant in the next six months that will produce 40 megawatts (Mw)
to rehabilitate micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in the state
and for use in homes.
Shettima said his idea of governance is
to lift the citizens out of poverty and deprivation. For women who have
been made widows by the cruel activities of Boko Haram, we will equip
each and every one of them with irrigation equipment to empower them to
take care of their families, and ensure gender empowerment and girl
child education.
Business enterprises seek long term loans with low interest
The Bank of Industry (BOI) asked banks
to give micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) long term loans at
low interest rate.
BOI General Manager, Joseph Babatunde,
made the call yesterday at The Nation’s forum on the economy. He said
this would make it possible for businesses to thrive.
He recommended collaboration between
BOI, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the International Finance
Corporation (IFC) on the establishment of Collateral Registry,saying
the registry would help de-risk the loans coming to MSMEs and encourage
lenders to lend to the small businesses.
Babatunde who spoke on the theme:
‘Changing the Face of MSMEs and Entrepreneurship in Nigeria’, said
interest on loans should not exceed two per cent.
He admitted that with the plunge in
crude oil prices, and continued foreign exchange scarcity businesses are
currently facing hard times.
The BOI manager explained that aside the
challenge of accessing foreign exchange, counterfeiting and piracy are
also a challenge faced by small businesses.
He said the CBN’s N220 billion MSMEs
fund has helped many small businesses access credit at single digit,
with significant part of the fund going to women entrepreneurs. He said
the BOI is also working closely with CBN and banks to reduce taxes paid
by MSMEs.
Meanwhile, the former commissioner for
finance in Lagos State and Chairman of Board of Vintage Press Limited,
publisher of The Nation, Mr. Wale Edun, expressed confidence in the
current ability of the Buhari Administration to get the country out of
the woods, adding that Nigerians should queue behind the government to
achieve the vision.


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