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Petrol Subsidy Is Organised Crime, I Will End It – Peter Obi

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The Presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi, has reiterated his vow to entirely eliminate petrol subsidies if elected in the upcoming election.

Petrol Subsidy Is Organised Crime, I Will End It - Peter Obi
Peter Obi

He said removing fuel subsidies had been on his priority list, and he would end the menace, which he described as “organised crime”, immediately after he assumes office.

Obi, who gave the assurance on Sunday at the People’s Town Hall 2023 organised by Channels Television.

Nigeria spent a total of N6.210 trillion on petrol subsidies, also called under-recovery shortfall, between 2013 to 2021.

Last year, the federal government announced that it will stop spending on subsidies from June 2023.

The LP presidential candidate said if he is elected into office, the payments will stop immediately.

“They have removed it. That is what they’ve done. But I can assure you, it will go immediately. The subsidy, I have said it before is organised crime and I will not allow it to stay a day longer,” Obi said.

“What they are telling you is not what it is. Half of what is being mentioned is not a subsidy. First, we consume the quantity that is not supposed to be consumed here.

“We are the same population as Pakistan. They consume below 50 per cent of what we consume.

“So, the first half, I will remove it so we can save the money.”

The LP candidate, who flayed the country’s public debt stock, added that the money spent on petrol subsidies should be channelled into social development.

“Look at this year’s budget. Education, which is the highest since this government came, is about N2 trillion. Health, which is the highest since this government came, is about N1.5 trillion. Then infrastructure, which is roads and everything, is about N1 trillion,” he said.

“These three critical development areas are receiving N4.5 trillion. The subsidy is N3.6 trillion for half a year. So, if it’s a full year, it is about N7 trillion. Which country will invest more in subsidies than education and health and even roads? It doesn’t make sense.”

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