Tinubu bans foreign trips by government officials from April
Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu will introduce a three-month ban on ministers and other government officials from going on publicly funded foreign trips.
Mr Femi Gbajabiamila, Tinubu's chief of staff, said the
move was prompted by the president's "concerns about the rising cost of
travel expenses" by public officials.
The ban will take effect on 1 April.
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| President Tinubu |
He came under attack, especially on social media, after
his government sponsored over 400 people to attend the COP28 climate conference
in Dubai last November.
Since his inauguration in May 2023, Mr Tinubu has made
more than 15 foreign trips.
The Nigerian president is said to have spent at least 3N.4
billion nara ($2.2m; £1.8m) on domestic and foreign travel in the first six
months of his presidency – 36per cent more than the budgeted amount for 2023.
Nigeria is grappling with one of its worst
cost-of-living crises in decades, a situation that has led to widespread
hardship and anger.
The three-month block on official travel by government
officials is Tinubu's latest attempt at countering the public backlash.
In January, the Nigerian president announced a reduction
in the size of the official travel delegation by about 60 per cent, including
cuts to his own travel entourage.
When the ban takes effect in April, government officials
will only go on foreign trips "deemed absolutely necessary". They
will also require President Tinubu's approval at least two weeks before they
travel.
Gbajabiamila added that the halt on travel will ensure
that government officials "focus on their respective mandates for
effective service delivery".
Despite clamping down on travel by government officials,
Tinubu has not said whether he will reduce his own trips.
The president and
his representatives have in the past defended his trips as being vital in addressing
the economic problems he is accused of ignoring.

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