By Sarafa Ibrahim
Yoruba elders are philosophical, often reading into the future through wise sayings and expressions. One of such expression is “iro ma un tan ina ni, ki leso”, literally meaning that lies can only have light but will never bear fruit.
This was the feeling I had moments after reading a document from the Debt Management Office (DMO) that analyzed the debt profile of each of the 36 states in Nigeria and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). My interest in the DMO document stems from the well-crafted lies by elements in the Osun State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to sell the impression that Governor Ademola Adeleke has added N10 billion to the state’s debt binge in the 2023 fiscal year.
Although, the author of the untruth, one Adebayo Adedeji, showed a lack of understanding of accounting and budgeting documents, his wrong conclusion was taken for a fact by his likes in the APC and spread out to misinform the public. But as fast as his lies and that of his party, the APC could run, the truth, which the DMO document represents, has caught up with it.
According to the DMO document, the domestic debt of Osun as of December 31, 2022, only a few days after Governor Adeleke assumed office, was N148bn. A year after, precisely December 31, 2023, the debt value has shed about N4bn, as it stood at N144bn. For the foreign debt, the DMO document showed that Osun was indebted to the tune of $91.77m as of December 31, 2022, and by December 31, 2023, the debt had drawn down to $87.24m, representing a reduction of over $7m in the state’s external debt.
The clear indication from the above data is that contrary to the false impression that Adedeji and his party tried to sell, Governor Adeleke did not add any kobo to the inherited debt binge. What the numbers clearly tell us is that Osun debt profile has seen a reduction under Governor Adeleke and the insinuation that the governor borrowed N10bn in 2023 is false.
Peoplesmind