Home » Presidency Fires Back at Amaechi Over Subsidy Remarks, Says Ex-Minister Still Bitter Over 2022 Loss

Presidency Fires Back at Amaechi Over Subsidy Remarks, Says Ex-Minister Still Bitter Over 2022 Loss

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By Adamu Aliyu Aliyu/ABUJA//

The Presidency has issued a scathing response to former Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, following his recent comments questioning the management of fuel subsidy savings under the administration of President Bola Tinubu.

 

Amaechi, speaking at his 60th birthday celebration in Abuja last month, accused the Tinubu-led government of diverting the supposed gains from fuel subsidy removal into private pockets.

 

“If I were president, yes, I would pursue some of the policies they are pursuing, but ask what the failure is: the failure is that the gains of those policies are in their private pockets,” the former Rivers State governor said. “At one point, we were paying between four to five trillion naira as subsidy; where is the money now?”

 

Responding via a detailed statement posted online, Special Adviser to the President on Social Media, Dada Olusegun, condemned Amaechi’s remarks as “outlandish” and “politically motivated,” suggesting they stem from his inability to move on from his defeat in the 2022 APC presidential primaries.

 

“More than two years after his primary election loss, it appears Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi has not gotten over the legitimate pain of defeat,” Olusegun stated. He accused Amaechi of aligning with opposition forces and attempting to discredit the administration with misleading narratives.

 

On the issue of fuel subsidy, Olusegun clarified that the real benefit of its removal was the halting of excessive borrowing and stopping the practice of mortgaging Nigeria’s future oil earnings. He revealed that since January 2025, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) resumed remitting 50% of crude oil revenues to the federation account, increasing disbursements to states significantly.

 

“These tiers of government are not private pockets,” Olusegun noted, adding that improved allocations have allowed

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