President Muhammadu Buhari said Tuesday in Abuja that his
administration would undertake a review of Nigerian foreign missions to
determine those that are really essential.
Speaking after being briefed by the permanent secretary of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Bulus Lolo, President Buhari said a
presidential committee would soon be established to carry out the
review.
The president said the review would determine the number of essential
missions Nigeria needs to maintain abroad so that appropriate standards
and quality can be maintained.
Nigeria currently has 119 foreign missions abroad, the permanent secretary said.
The country will spend N34billion to run the missions in 2015.
The president said there was no point in Nigeria operating missions
all over the world “with dilapidated facilities and demoralized staff”,
when the need for some of the missions was questionable.
“Let’s keep only what we can manage. We can’t afford much for now.
There’s no point in pretending,” President Buhari told Mr. Lolo and
other officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The president also called for the record of former government
officials and other persons still using diplomatic and official
passports illegally, saying his administration will take necessary
action against them.
“Something has to be done so that we can get back our respectability
as a country. Some people carry official passports and get involved in
all sorts of negative acts. We need to do something about it,” the
president said.
Mr. Lolo told President Buhari that the challenges facing the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs include the absence of a Foreign Service
Commission, poor funding of foreign missions, policy inconsistencies and
training deficiencies, among others
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Tosin Adesile is a profilic writer. I am easy going guy and fun to be with.
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