ENUGU, Nigeria (VOICE OF NAIJA)- Vice-President Kashim Shettima has blamed the rising cost of living and inflation in the country on politicians who lost in the 2023 general election.
He accused them of planning to throw Nigeria into anarchy, sabotaging the country by smuggling food out to other countries to trigger food price hikes.
Shettima made the claims on Tuesday at a conference on Public Wealth Management in Abuja, stating that 45 trucks smuggling food out of the country were intercepted.
“Just three nights ago, 45 trucks of maize were caught being transported to neighbouring countries.
“Just in that Ilela axis, there are 32 illegal smuggling routes“, ” Mr Shettima claimed.
He further claimed that due to the interception, the price of maize fell.
READ ALSO: Hardship: Don’t Join Ongoing Protest Or Regret It – IPOB Warns Igbos
“And the moment those foodstuffs were intercepted, the price of maize came down by N10,000. It came down from N60,000 to N50,000. So, there are forces that are hell-bent on undermining our nation, but this is the time for us to coalesce into a singular entity”, Shettima explained.
The vice-president emphasised that some political actors are hell-bent on plunging Nigeria into anarchy over their failure to grab power in the last election.
“Forces are hell-bent on plunging this country into a state of anarchy. Those who could not get to power through the ballot box, instead for them to wait till 2027, are so desperate.
“We have to make this country work. We have to move beyond politics. We are now in the face of governance. Sadly, some of our countrymen are still in the political mode.
“They are the practitioners of violence, advocating that Nigeria should go the Lebanon way. But Nigeria is greater than any one of us here. Nigeria will weather the storm”, Shettima stressed.
However, Shettima did not mention the names of the politicians he accused of plunging the country into further economic chaos and sabotaging President Bola Tinubu’s government.
Meanwhile, Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Labour Party’s Peter Obi, and other top contenders in the general election, have continued to criticized Tinubu’s handling of the economy.