President
Muhammadu Buhari Friday in New York, reaffirmed his administration’s
total commitment to the entrenchment of a fully transparent and
accountable public revenue management system in Nigeria.
Making this known in his address to the United Nations Plenary Summit
for the adoption of the Post-2015 Development Agenda, President Buhari
said his administration was taking steps to improve and streamline
internal generation of revenue and to plug all loopholes that have led
to illicit capital flight from Nigeria.
The president informed the gathering that his government was also
putting mechanisms in place to prevent oil theft and other criminal
practices that are detrimental to Nigeria’s economy.
While commending the adoption of the Post-2015 Global Development
Agenda, President Buhari, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media
and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said that he was very pleased that world
leaders had reaffirmed their commitment to sustainable development,
international peace and security and the protection of the planet.
He said: “These are really the major issues of the day. For the first
time, we have at our disposal a framework that is universal in scope and
outlook, with clearly defined goals and targets and appropriately
crafted methods of implementation.
“The declaration that we have adopted today testifies to the urgency and
the necessity for action by all of us. It is not for want of commitment
that previous initiatives have failed or could not be fully realized.
What seemed to be lacking in the past were political will and the
required global partnership to pursue and implement the programmes to
which we committed ourselves.
“This declaration enjoys global consensus. We have agreed to deliver as
one and to leave no one behind. This is a promise worth keeping. We have
agreed to create viable partnerships and to adopt the means of
implementation for the goals and targets of the global sustainable
development agenda in all its three dimensions; namely economic, social
and environmental.
“The Post-2015 Development Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs) together with the Addis Ababa Action Agenda that we adopted in
July 2015 offer us a unique opportunity to address the unfinished
business of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
“They also provide the basis for a new set of global development
priorities to usher in a peaceful and prosperous world, where no one is
left behind, and where the freedom from fear and want, and for everyone
to live in dignity, is enthroned”, President Buhari said.
Stressing that illiteracy, hunger and diseases are associated evils that
go hand in hand with poverty, the President urged the assembled world
leaders to do everything possible “to eliminate these ills from our
midst by 2030 as the declaration loudly proclaims”.
“The bottom billion that has neither safety nets nor social protection
need to be rescued from their perpetual state of hopelessness, fear and
indignity. This is a task that should have been accomplished decades
ago. Now that it has fallen on our shoulders to discharge this
responsibility, we should do so with the enthusiasm and commitment that
is worthy of the cause.
“We must adopt targeted interventions at both policy and practical
levels, to address extreme poverty and combat illiteracy, hunger and
diseases. We must create viable partnerships that bring together
national, regional and global actors with shared objectives to carry
this forward.
“We must also create the enabling environments for executing this global
agenda, by developing the relevant frameworks for working with
different types of partners and constituencies that recognize the
contributions of civil society, religious and cultural bodies, private
sector, academia and, most importantly, governments.
“Just as the relative success of the MDGs was underpinned by national
ownership, the Post-2015 and the SDGs frameworks must also be guided by
national priorities and ownership. Domestic resource mobilization
supplemented by improved terms of trade between industrial and
developing economies should drive the implementation processes in both
streams. The facilitation of remittances by migrant and overseas
workers, as well as efficient tax collection are needed as complimentary
sources of financing for development”, the president said.
He also said that Nigeria was proud to have availed her services to the
United Nations in co-chairing the Intergovernmental Committee of Experts
on Sustainable Development Financing, whose work contributed in no
small measure to the expansion of financing for development strategies.
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