President Muhammadu Buhari, has on Thursday, renewed his appeal for debt cancellation for African counties, in a virtual meeting tagged: ”High-Level Event on Financing for Development in the Era of Covid-19 and Beyond”, convened by Canada, Jamaica, and the Secretary-General of the United Nations, UN.
Equally, the he urged major nations to provide free additional resources through an international consensus, to assist poor countries fight the coronavirus pandemic.
President Buhari speaking further, cautioned major nations against adopting a ”me first” and ”every man for himself” attitude, warning that the consequences for all of us in the 21st century, can only be imagined.
His words: “The world has changed through Covid-19, and so must the global financing architecture for development financing, and the response to the current pandemic. There is an urgent need for weak and needy countries, especially those of Africa, to receive a fresh reprieve.
“This is a historic plague affecting every corner of the globe. In the circumstances, the response needed must be global, unconditional, comprehensive, and rapid. Debts must be forgiven and cancelled. Free additional resources are needed urgently, through an international consensus, to enable poor countries work to reverse the devastation of Covid-19 to the human race.
“Rising now and standing together in true global solidarity, to my mind is the only hope for humanity, the best approach to safeguarding the 2030 SDGs, and the only way we can build back for more resilient economies and societies.
“For Nigeria, the shocks are multiple, including the sharp decline in international oil prices, which has negatively impacted revenues and growth, worsened external and domestic positions, and further increased banking sector vulnerabilities, resulting in enormous human and economic toll on the country.
“We have been proactive in implementing a number of strong measures, including fiscal, monetary, and structural policies, and a multi-front response to the health crisis created by Covid-19, which captures all tiers of government, as well as the private sector.
“Our objective is to revert to the government’s planned medium-term fiscal consolidation path once the crisis is over. Our strategy for macroeconomic stability, is anchored on our home-grown Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).”