By Durosinmi-etti Moriam
Edited by Adeyemi Temitope Joshua
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, yesterday, faulted what he described as the uneven appointment of heads of security agencies, saying it only favours people from the northern region.Atiku, who noted this during an interaction with members of the Nigerian Guild of Editors in Lagos, said if he emerges president in 2023, every geopolitical zone would be represented in the entire security structure. He maintained that PDP would form a government of national unity.
Atiku also reiterated his resolve to concession most agencies for greater efficiency, stressing that government has no business running some of them.He said: “PDP will form a government of national unity. In 1999, we had two presidential candidates from the south, and the PDP won resoundingly well. But we had a government of national unity.
“We had APP, AD ministers, and the country became one. This provided the peace and stability that we want. This is what I intend to do. PDP will set up a government of national unity. It is one of the ways to unite this country. Every section or geo-political zone will be carried along in appointments into every sectorWe will unify this country. Today, we have 17 heads of the various security agencies from the north. I won’t do that. I will make sure every geopolitical zone is represented in these security outfits.”Atiku also promised that his administration would continue with the economic policy of the PDP government between 1999 and 2007.
He said: “We will liberalise the economy and promote the private sector, to create more jobs and wealth in simple, straightforward terms.
“Liberalising the economy is broad; empowering the private sector is broad. We will continue the privatisation of our public enterprises. In other words, we will have a more private sector-driven economy.If you look at the thriving economies in the world, they allow the private sector to run the economy. If you see the amount of work the government has to do in terms of constructing and decongesting our ports, and railway, and you have to borrow, I will rather concession most of these projects to the private sector and give them tax incentives. This will bring progress, prosperity and peace.”Responding to questions from editors, the former Vice President said his administration would work closely with the private sector to ensure gaps in infrastructure are closed.He noted: “The private sector is pivotal to my agenda for rejuvenating the economy and closing our infrastructure deficit. If I am elected president, I will work closely with the private sector by giving them incentives to create more jobs and also granting them tax holidays to help them intervene in our infrastructure development.

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