Abuja - The All Progressives Congress (APC) has blamed the fuel scarcity
on the People’s Democratic Party-led Federal Government.
According to APC, the government was “acting out a clandestine script to increase fuel prices through the back door.”
According
to the party, the ongoing nationwide fuel scarcity may have been
induced to make higher fuel prices a “fait accompli for Nigerians.”
In
a statement issued in Lagos on Tuesday
by its Interim National
Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said the fact that
the scarcity has persisted despite the claims by the government and the
oil markers and the measures purportedly taken by the government to
ameliorate the situation, was the clearest indication of “official
deception.”
“The more fuel trucks the government claims to have
sent to major cities to ease the scarcity, the more difficult it is for
Nigerians to obtain the product. This is an old trick and Nigerians
should not be hoodwinked into believing there will be no increase in
fuel prices. The only deterrent is to let the government know Nigerians
will resist any price hike. The truth is that with the elections
approaching, the PDP-led FG is desperately seeking all possible avenues
to raise funds for its usual electoral shenanigans, and increasing fuel
prices has always been an attractive option to the government, not
minding what the impact will be on the same people it has impoverished
since 1999,” PDP stated.
The opposition party added that the
lingering scarcity had already forced many Nigerians to pay as much as
N120 per litre of fuel.
“The next refrain from the government
will be that only higher prices will guarantee the availability of the
product, and that many marketers are unwilling to import the product
because of low profit margin. We urge Nigerians not to swallow this
bait,” the party said.
The party also commended the Nigeria
Labour Congress (NLC) for its timely warning against any plan to hike
fuel prices, saying the government’s administration's assurances that
fuel prices would not be increased were not worth anything because the
government was “credibility-deficient.”
“The big deception of
2012, when the government slammed a massive price hike on Nigerians on
New Year's Day despite assurances to the contrary, is still too fresh in
the memories of Nigerians. The same people who inflicted that pain on
Nigerians are still in charge, so no one should trust them,” the
opposition stated.
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