
Following President Muhammadu Buhari's announcement last week Friday that Nigeria is broke,
President Muhammadu Buhari and as such, he might not be able to pay
ministers, some minister-designates have said they are ready to work for
free.
Adebayo Shittu and Professor Isaac Adewole were among those who declared this.
The ministers, who along with their colleagues are expected to be
sworn in and given portfolios soon, described their appointment as a
call to service.
Representing Oyo state at the yet-to-be-constituted Federal
Executive Council, Shittu said he was ready to give his services for
free to Nigeria if that was what the situation demanded.
According to Shittu, who is also a legal practitioner and human
rights activist, what matters is the intention to serve and not the
financial benefits.
“It is an issue of national service. There is nothing too much
to sacrifice. If that is what our situation in Nigeria demands, then we
must put ourselves up selflessly. We cannot say because of selfishness,
we cannot work selflessly,” he said.
“With my background as somebody from a very humble family, I
know what poverty is and I have been experiencing it. I have been dogged
in conforming to the dictates of politics and poverty. There is nothing
too much to sacrifice for the service of our people,” he added.
Adewole, a former vice chancellor of the University of Ibadan, in a
statement signed by his media aide Sunday Saanu, said he was ready to
serve the nation without pay.
Saanu who is to represent Osun state said: “It is a great
honour to serve one’s fatherland and I can tell you Prof. Adewole is
ready to serve Nigeria without collecting salaries. Everything is not
about money. It is a privilege and a great honour to serve. This is what
he was doing at his former school. He was paying some teachers employed
to complement government’s efforts.
“He is not driven by money but passion to make positive impact in the nation in whatever capacity.”
The former governor of Rivers state, Rotimi Amaechi, also said he did not accept to be a minister for personal gains.
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