Buhari rejects N400m cars
President Muhammadu Buhari has turned down a proposal to buy new cars for his use. He will stick to the vehicles he inherited from former President Goodluck Jonathan
The proposal from the Aso Rock  bureaucracy is for Buhari to approve the purchase of five customised  armoured Mercedes Benz S-600 (V222) cars at about N400 million.
It was learnt that President Buhari  rejected the proposal on Wednesday when he received briefings from the  Permanent Secretary (State House), Mr. Nebolisa Emodi.
The President has been receiving  briefings from permanent secretaries since the beginning of the week on  the activities of the ministries.
He directed that the proposal, which was first made to ex-President Jonathan, be dropped.
Jonathan had advised that the plan be  left for Buhari to approve since it was made in the twilight of his  administration and the cars would be due for delivery till after he  might have left the office.
Buhari, according to a sources, told the  permanent secretary that the cars he inherited from the Jonathan  administration were good enough for him.
“I don’t need new cars. The ones I’m using now are just fine,” the source reported the president as saying.
He however approved the plan of the  Permanent Secretary to reduce the operating costs of the State House and  strengthen its Finance and Accounts Internal Control Mechanisms.
Buhari told him to capture all State  House expenses within the approved budget, to avoid the frequent  recourse to “Presidential intervention funds,” as it was rampant in the  last administration.
When he visited the United Kingdom in  May, shortly before his inauguration, the then president-elect rejected  the exotic cars made available for his use by the Nigerian High  Commission.
When he arrived at Heathrow Airport, he  turned down the Rolls Royce brought by the High Commission by telling  High Commissioner Dalhatu Tafida, that his visit was strictly private  and he had made arrangements for all his needs in the UK.
A presidential spokesman Mallam Garba  Shehu said “in keeping with his commitment to prudence in the management  of national resources, President Buhari will continue to use the cars  left behind by President Jonathan.”
Permanent secretaries in the ministries  of Works, Justice, Trade and Investment, also briefed the president at  the Aso Villa yesterday.
The Justice ministry’s Permanent  Secretary Alhaji Abdullahi Ahmed told reporters at the end of the  briefing that his ministry will work closely  with others to facilitate  trial of those found wanting.
“If the ministry receives investigations concluded by the responsible agencies, we will play our part.
“We will play our part in the  prosecution of whoever has been found wanting and the security agencies  have concluded their investigation on them.
“At the moment, the ministry is not in receipt of any report concerning anybody in that regard.“
Ahmed said the ministry would continue  to cooperate with the President to ensure that all the promises he made  to Nigerians relating to the Rule of Law were kept.
“We have briefed the President on how we conduct ourselves concerning the maintenance of the Rule of Law in the country.
“As you know, Rule of Law is one of the  cardinal policies of this administration and we have given him a rundown  of what we have been doing from 2011 till now.
“We also pledged to him our continued  cooperation to ensure that all the promises he has made to Nigerians –  as far as they relate to the Rule of Law are achieved.“
Amb. Abdulkadir Musa of the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment said his meeting with Buhari centred on job creation.
Musa said the administration was working assiduously to attract more investments to Nigeria and encourage business.
According to him, the President has  given him the mandate to discuss with the relevant people that will  assist in driving the agenda.
Mr. Dauda Kigbu of the Ministry of  Works, said the Federal Government was considering funding road  construction outside the annual budgetary allocations with the Public  Private Partnerships (PPP).
He said: “I took the President through  the activities of the Ministry of Works. As you may be aware, 90 per  cent of the ministry’s mandate is mainly on roads.
“I went through all the major projects  across the country and I emphasised the need of seeking other windows of  funding outside of the national budget, particularly looking at PPP  model as well as looking at various support, like multilateral supports  from agencies, such as the World Bank.” He said

please share your thoughts