Shettima anticipates significant challenges for most Nigerians this Ramadan.

Vice-President, Kashim Shettima, has said the Nigerian government is aware that the forthcoming Ramadan fast will come with “severe challenges” for most Nigerians due to the economic reforms introduced by the administration of President Bola Tinubu.

Shettima during a pre-Ramadan lecture organised by the University of Lagos Muslim Alumni in Lagos State said the economic policies and choices adopted come with challenges and difficulties, which would be “more telling on the poor.”

The event was themed “Economic Reforms for Nigeria: Challenges and Prospects for the Future”.

Shettima, who was presented by his special adviser on political matters, Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, appealed to Nigerians to protest the current economic challenges in the country “in a responsible and mature manner”.

He said: “The leadership of President Tinubu recognises that this Ramadan will come with severe challenges for most Nigerians.

“The road to where we are today was long and full of missed opportunities and tragic failures to build on our great potential.

“The consequences of our past are the stark realities we face today, such as rising cost of living and pessimism over our prospect to turn round our economy in the direction of growth and inclusive development.

“Yet, my brothers and sisters, we do not have the choice of continuing in the direction that brought us where we are today. We have to fix this country, and failure to do this is not an option.

“All the options we have are difficult and challenging, and they are, without a doubt, more telling on the poor. If there are easier and reliable alternatives to the policy choices we have adopted, we would have adopted them.

“Our administration does not plan to make lives of Nigerians more difficult. Nor do we intend to deceive fellow citizens that the change in direction and the expected outcome can be achieved without pain or sacrifices.

“We are also acutely aware that ours is a set of related Nigerian problems, and the solutions we seek must be genuinely informed by a Nigerian context, not the experiences of others or the preferences of special foreign interests, which are removed from consequences of mis-steps or errors of judgement.

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