FG BLAST CRITICS OF CHANGE
CAMPAIGN
T
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he Federal Government says the
implementation of the national re-orientation campaign, Change Begins with Me,
started from the leadership, contrary to the position of some critics.
The Minister of Information and
Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, made this known yesterday in Abuja, when he
received a delegation of National Council of Women’s Societies, NCWS.
He said: “People have criticised the
campaign. Some have said that the campaign ought to start from the top. We
completely agree with them, but their criticism is because they did not
understand the campaign.
“The campaign actually started from
the top, because we are doing what we are preaching. This is the least ostentatious
cabinet you can ever have.
“We are all living and showing good
examples— we obey traffic rules, we queue up at public places and get to work
early and close late.
”The minister also faulted the
position of some critics of the campaign, who said it was ill-timed because of
the state of the economy.
He added
that “some people said that we should wait for the economy to improve before we
start the campaign, but we say no, for two reasons.
“First, if only those before us had launched the campaign, we will not be where we are today. If the campaign had sunk in, there will be no embezzlement, no corruption and no impunity.
“First, if only those before us had launched the campaign, we will not be where we are today. If the campaign had sunk in, there will be no embezzlement, no corruption and no impunity.
You cannot
say, as a mother, that because you are poor, you will allow your daughter to go
out from morning till midnight without correcting her.
“Second, though we are facing difficulties now, we still have to tell Nigerians the need to do the right things.” Mohammed said that the campaign was not meant to put any burden on Nigerians, but only to ask them to do the right things.
“Second, though we are facing difficulties now, we still have to tell Nigerians the need to do the right things.” Mohammed said that the campaign was not meant to put any burden on Nigerians, but only to ask them to do the right things.
He added
that part of the campaign was for Nigerians to embrace and buy made in Nigeria
products to improve the economy and create jobs.
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