Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo said Tuesday that leaders must collaborate to find solutions to the festering problem of poverty in Nigeria.
The vice president president, while admitting that millions of Nigerians are extremely poor, said elected leaders would be irresponsible if they did not collaborate and sort out what he called the nation’s life-threatening problems.
He spoke at the closing of the two-day executive-legislative leadership retreat held at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
According to him, members of the executive and legislative arms of government have to collaborate for the sake effectively dealing with these challenges.
Osinbajo said that was necessary if they (the leaders) were not to fail Nigerians, who elected them to serve their interests.
“Let me say that every generation of leadership must understand context. Law itself must be interpreted and implemented in context,” the Vice president said.
“What is the reality of the context that we operate in today? We all know our nation has millions of extremely poor people; the COVID-19 pandemic has worsened employment and poverty.”
On the consequences of poverty, he said that Nigeria has huge deficits in infrastructure with many children are out of school.
Osinbajo said further, “If that is our context, we will be callous and irresponsible if we don’t come together, work together to sort out these grave life-threatening problems our people have to confront every day.
“It is time to focus on what we have been elected or appointed to do. Our people just want food on their table, shelter over their heads, clothing on their bodies, health care and education for their children and themselves.
“So, the good legislator or good minister is not the one who is waving the law, and procedure, and doctrines, it is the one who says the spirit of our Constitution is that we secure the maximum welfare, freedom and happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice and equality of status and opportunity.
“The good legislator or minister is the one who will do all in his or her power to serve the needs of our people, even if it means walking the fine lines, as Hon Wudil said, between the law and reality.”
In a communiqué issued at the end of the retreat, participants, among other things, called for the creation of an effective conflict management and resolution mechanism in resolving areas of disagreement between the executive and legislature in the overall national interest.
The communiqué added, “Operators in the arms of government should act with moderation and limit their sense of entitlement by placing public interest over and above personal and parochial interest.
“The Presidency should strengthen the capacity of the Executive Liaison Offices in the National Assembly.”