STATEHOUSE PRESS RELEASE WE’RE ENGAGING THE WORLD DIPLOMATICALLY, PRESIDENT TINUBU TELLS FEDERAL EXECUTIVE COUNCIL President Bola Tinubu, on Thursday in Abuja, stated that Nigeria remains on a steady growth trajectory, with more promise of stability and prosperity as economic reforms continue to yield results and gain national and international acceptance. The President spoke at the Federal Executive Council after the swearing-in of two ministers, Dr Bernard Mohammed Doro, and Dr Kingsley Tochukwu Udeh (SAN). Doro will manage the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, while Udeh will oversee the Ministry of Innovation, Science and Technology. On the current state of the economy and the relationship between Nigeria and the United States, President Tinubu assured that the Federal Government was engaging with the world diplomatically. “The most important thing is the fact that despite the political headwinds and the fear of our people, we will continue to engage with partners. “The success of the $2.3 billion eurobond that was oversubscribed by 400% is the most assuring. So, the task ahead is immense; we are engaging the world diplomatically, and we assure all of you that we will defeat terrorism in this country. “The task ahead is immense, but it is our resolve to move forward with unity and purpose, guided by the Renewed Hope Agenda to build a prosperous, inclusive and resilient Nigeria." On the security challenges facing the country, President Tinubu, as the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, charged Nigerians not to succumb to despair, assuring that the government will defeat every form of terrorism and secure every part of the country. He called Ministers and other officials to ensure consistency in communication and avoid discordant messaging. "Do we have problems? Yes. Are we challenged by terrorism? Yes. But we will defeat terrorism. We will overcome the CPC designation. Nigeria is one happy family, and we shall spare no effort until we eliminate all criminals from our society. We want our friends to help us as we step up our fight against terrorism, and we will eliminate it," President Tinubu assured. During the cabinet meeting, President Tinubu, who directed Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, to brief the Council on the nation's economic performance, stated that the government will continue to sustain and consolidate the gains. Earlier in his address, the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy noted that the macroeconomic indicators showed the economy had picked up, with one of the best results in the last decade. Edun said: "The reforms that have been taken under your Renewed Hope Agenda, so bold and sometimes unpopular, are rooted in a clear objective to build a competitive economy that attracts, creates jobs and lifts millions out of poverty. “In Q2 2025, Nigeria's GDP grew by 4.23%, the highest in a decade, outside the COVID rebound. Thirteen sectors recorded growth above 7% up from nine sectors in the previous quarter. “The industrial sector nearly doubled its growth from 3.72% to 7.45%, reflecting rising productivity and investor confidence. Inflation eased to 18.02% in September 2025. As we know, foreign exchange reserves topped $43 billion, and our trade surplus reached N7.4 trillion. “Clear examples of macroeconomic stability, as the consumer spending basket published earlier this year shows, our citizens now spend maybe about half of the income on basic needs, food, shelter and clothing, as compared with almost 90% previously. “This signals a country moving from subsistence towards productivity and indeed affluence.’’ The minister said the vision of reaching a one trillion dollar economy by 2030 was achievable by pursuing a 7% annual growth and a commitment to ending poverty as a moral imperative. “Nigeria's removal from the Financial Action Task Force Grey List marks a major milestone in strengthening our financial integrity and confidence. “At the recent World Bank/IMF annual meetings, global leaders commended our reforms, our progress and the revised IMF growth forecast of up to nearly 4% and improved credit ratings,’’ the minister added. He said there was an urgency to mobilise domestic resources and provide investment to finance infrastructure, as well as drive sustainability and job-rich growth. Yesterday's hugely successful $2.35 billion Eurobond issuance, in which the order book peaked at over $13 billion, is a testament to continued investor confidence in our country, our reform agenda and Mr President's leadership. “Despite the political headwinds which we are all aware of, the market shrugged off those political considerations and focused on the economic fundamentals of Nigeria’’ he stated. For greater inclusivity, Edun urged ministers overseeing sectors such as infrastructure, mining, education, health, agriculture, the blue economy, digital innovation, arts, and culture to collaborate with sub-national governments to identify and package projects that meet investor expectations. “Every Naira must be optimised to sustain momentum amid global liquidity constraints. Where there is less funding from multilateral institutions, we must rely on our own resources. The next phase of reforms will remove barriers holding back investors. We will review tariffs and import restrictions to stimulate productivity and investment,’’ he said. Bayo Onanuga Special Adviser to the President (Information & Strategy) November 6, 2025

Nov 6, 2025 · 4:38 PM UTC

Replying to @aonanuga1956
The Tinubu administration keeps repeating the same propaganda script — “economic reforms are working,” “the world believes in Nigeria,” “GDP is growing” — yet the ordinary Nigerian can’t afford food, rent, transport, or medicine. What kind of “growth” doesn’t reflect in the lives of the people? You talk about a $2.3 billion Eurobond oversubscribed by 400%, but fail to tell Nigerians that Eurobonds are foreign debts, not free money. What you’re celebrating is Nigeria borrowing more, at higher interest rates, while the naira bleeds daily. Investor “confidence” is meaningless when citizens have no confidence in their government’s sincerity or competence. You boast of inflation easing to 18.02%, when in reality food inflation remains above 30%, fuel prices have tripled, and transport costs have crushed the informal economy. If this is “Renewed Hope,” then what would despair look like? You mention GDP growth and $43 billion in reserves but omit the real picture: reserves are inflated by short-term foreign inflows that will flee the moment global interest rates shift. Meanwhile, local industries are dying, factories are shutting down, unemployment is climbing, and hunger is spreading faster than any “growth statistic” you can conjure. This government says “we are engaging the world diplomatically,” but where is the diplomatic success when Nigeria is still listed by the U.S. as a country of religious concern, and insecurity persists across the North, Middle Belt, and even the South? Diplomacy is not about photo ops or statements,it’s about protecting your citizens and restoring international credibility. You can’t talk about defeating terrorism while insecurity remains rampant, and your own officials are still debating ransom policies. Nigerians don’t want motivational speeches, they want results, safety, jobs, and affordable living. Until the government starts measuring success by the quality of life of Nigerians, not the applause of foreign lenders or IMF praise-singers, every “growth claim” remains nothing but an illusion built on borrowed confidence.
Replying to @aonanuga1956
All this grammar wey una dey blow no go change wetin Nigerians dey face. GDP fit grow 7%, IMF fit clap for una, Eurobond fit oversubscribe, but make we reason am — who GDP e help when rice don turn luxury? Dem say “macroeconomic stability,” but person wey no fit buy bread no dey feel any “stability.” Inflation still dey chase people from market. Light no dey. Diesel don turn gold. Transport don double. Na which kain “growth” be that? Dem dey shout $43 billion reserves, but no be debt and borrowed dollars dey inside? Oversubscription no mean confidence, e just mean investors sabi say Nigeria go pay any price to borrow. If una dey offer 9% yield when others dey offer 3%, of course dem go rush am. Na hunger wey una package as “reform.” As for “lifting people out of poverty,” na who una don lift? The same people wey dey earn ₦100k now dey buy garri like luxury item. Na poverty una dey lift into higher dimension. Abeg make una stop to dey use grammar cover hardship. People no dey chop “Eurobond.” We no dey cook “GDP.” We just wan fit buy food, pay rent, and sleep with light.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
Ministers get new appointments every week, but Nigerians still can’t get electricity for 24 hours straight.
Replying to @aonanuga1956
If “Nigeria is one happy family,” then some of us are clearly the stepchildren.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
How exactly are you “engaging the world diplomatically”? The US president has publicly called out our own leader, reminding him to do his constitutional job, protect every citizen and stop signing “peace accords” with terrorist murderers instead, send those killers straight to meet their Creator. You can’t build a stable economy when insecurity keeps everyone sleeping with one eye open. If you’re truly engaging the world, your actions would show it. Jet-setting around the globe isn’t diplomacy; real engagement means making a positive impact on your own people by keeping them safe 24/7. APC spent all their energy chasing power, but never bothered to learn how to actually govern successfully.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
He’s tired
Replying to @aonanuga1956
Let the aged chill 😪
Replying to @aonanuga1956
The sponsors of terrorism is Nigeria are known according different evidence. Go against them if you too are not guilty
Replying to @aonanuga1956
Ọkàn gbogbo yín ò ní balẹ̀!
Replying to @aonanuga1956
You're not telling the world, how you intend to resolve the issues or Solution and plans on ground You're here dishout propaganda script
Replying to @aonanuga1956
Mimi kan kan ko ni mi e Omo Olodo Ide, Oluwa wa leyin e digbi…. Awon eleribu terrorists sympathizers Ko ni da epo si aso ala e
Replying to @aonanuga1956
A lot of loop holes in your write up, nothing in this article is real. It’s all made up. Just plain lies with no actual fact or evidence to back it up.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
You've been busy.
Replying to @aonanuga1956
A lawyer will manage the Ministry of Science, Technology, and Innovation. Una too de joke no wonder Nigeria is tagged a disgraced country..
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
Christians are disproportionately targeted according to Lai Mohammed
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
Dear @BayoOnanuga Inform the President to focus on confronting bandits in Sambisa instead of engaging diplomats in Washington. Tackle terrorists in the Zurmi forests rather than sending envoys to UN social events. Muslims are being killed in Sokoto, Christians are slaughtered in Benue. Children are kidnapped in Kaduna, bullets spare no faith. You claim a GDP growth of 4.23%? Tell that to the farmer who’s paying “harvest tax” to armed teenagers. A $2.35B Eurobond is oversubscribed? Investors are not banking on your governance, they're investing in oil. Foreign exchange reserves stand at $43B, while ransom payments drain ₦10B annually, only the bandit economy is prospering. With inflation at 18%, consider Potiskum traders who are paying 200% more for onions after bandits destroyed their farms. Exiting the FATF Grey List? Great, but now address the real grey list; the deadly highways: Abuja–Kaduna, Birnin Gwari, Maiduguri–Damaturu, Benue-Yelwata- Jos. World leaders “commend reforms”? They will celebrate when Nigeria stops being a glaring example of state failure. Is the CPC designation a burden? Eliminate it by ensuring equal justice for both mosques and churches without excuses. New Ministers? Start in Humanitarian Affairs by addressing the needs of IDPs trapped in neglected camps. In Innovation, develop drones that eliminate terrorists, not just ones for ceremonial purposes. Stop with the empty promises. Take action. Strike hard. Provide security. The world has already witnessed your failures through viral videos of mass burials, now let them see your effectiveness in neutralizing terrorists. No more press releases after funerals. Combat insecurity, before it consumes Nigeria.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
So after borrowing $2.3 billion, we’re calling it “engaging the world diplomatically”? That’s not diplomacy, that’s debt diplomacy.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
$43 billion in reserves but students still studying under leaking roofs and doctors are fleeing the country. Where’s the balance?
Replying to @aonanuga1956
Twitter presidency! Nobody is bold enough to hold a press conference and deliver briefings, take questions and speak to Nigerians
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
Over-subscribed Eurobond doesn’t mean progress. It just means investors know we’ll keep paying back with our children’s future.
Replying to @aonanuga1956
If Nigeria is now stable and prosperous as they claim, why is the naira still gasping for breath?
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
They say inflation is down to 18%, but food prices in the market keep rising daily. Which Nigeria are they talking about?
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
Nigerians are tired of long speeches and polished press statements that sound good on paper but don’t translate into relief on the streets. Mr. President, the truth is simple: the true measure of progress is not in Eurobond subscriptions, international commendations, or high-level meetings. It is in the daily lives of Nigerians. You say Nigeria is on a “steady growth trajectory.” But where is the evidence in the market? The price of a bag of rice has tripled. Fuel now takes more than half of a worker’s monthly salary. Transport fares have gone out of reach. Electricity is unstable, yet tariffs keep rising. Businesses are shutting down because diesel is unaffordable, and the Naira remains volatile despite all the “reforms.” Unemployment is still widespread, and youth hopelessness is turning into frustration. Common sense tells us: an economy that looks good on paper but leaves its people hungry is not healthy. Yes, the Eurobond was oversubscribed, but that’s not an endorsement of our prosperity. It’s simply investors seeking profit at high interest rates. Meanwhile, Nigeria must pay back those loans in dollars, and that means more pressure on our fragile economy in the future. We hear of “macroeconomic stability,” but what about microeconomic reality, the one that hits every household daily? The cost of living crisis has never been this severe. Inflation may have “eased to 18%” on paper, but in the markets, prices keep climbing. That’s not easing. That’s survival by struggle. You speak of diplomatic engagement and international acceptance. Nigerians would prefer domestic satisfaction, food, jobs, affordable transport, safety, and power that actually works. Diplomacy can not replace delivery. Mr. President, people are not feeling the “Renewed Hope” yet. The average Nigerian does not eat GDP numbers or trade surplus figures. We feel government impact through affordable food, reliable power, functioning schools, safe streets, and money that still has value at the market. Governance should be measured not by how much applause we get abroad but by how much relief we bring at home. The true economic index is the well-being of the people, not the praise of financial institutions. So yes, continue engaging the world, but please start engaging Nigerians with results. The people’s reality will always speak louder than any press release.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
“We will defeat terrorism” — same line every year. Meanwhile, bandits are still collecting taxes in some states.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
So we have “Renewed Hope,” yet poverty and insecurity remain renewed every month.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
We don’t need another lecture about macroeconomic stability; we need microeconomic relief.
Replying to @aonanuga1956
They boast about investor confidence but ignore citizen confidence — and that’s the real economy.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
This government celebrates numbers while citizens celebrate survival. GDP growth means nothing when hunger is growing faster.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
The only thing growing faster than GDP under Tinubu is the number of taxes.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
My President will succeed Nigeria will win💚🥂
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
$13 billion investor interest in Eurobond? Nigerians don’t need bonds — we need affordable food, fuel, and safety.
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
A GOVERNMENT THAT PAMPERS TERRORISTS, CANNOT BE TRUSTED TO FIGHT TERRORISM..
Replying to @aonanuga1956
The only language this guy understands is target lock next is boom 💥
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Replying to @aonanuga1956
@POTUS no forget this guy
Replying to @aonanuga1956
"On the current state of the economy and the relationship between Nigeria and the United States, President Tinubu assured that the Federal Government was engaging with the world diplomatically" Please what is the meaning of this statement abi una just open mouth to rubbish