LAGOS, Nigeria
The streets of Lagos, Nigeria's largest city, are packed with angry demonstrators calling to "end hardship now!" amid the West African country's worst economic crisis in more than two decades.
The protests kicked off on
Tuesday after one of the country's main unions, the Nigeria Labour
Congress (NLC), called for Nigerians to come out to the streets.
‘'There is suffering in the
land, there is suffering for the workers, no worker can live on 30,000 naira
($18.40) minimum wage and over 150 million Nigerians are living below the
poverty line," NLC president Joe Ajaero told demonstrators.
When Nigerian President
Bola Tinubu took office in May 2023, he
removed a fuel subsidy as part of his economic reforms.
But the measures sent fuel costs soaring and the prices of food and
transport almost tripled.
The naira lost around 70% of
its value and dropped to record lows after Tinubu last year scrapped the
pegging of the naira to the US dollar.
Last May, 10,000 naira would
buy $22 — now it will only fetch around $6.40.
The plunging naira has
resulted in a rise in the price of all imported products — and inflation has
soared to 30%.
But Nigerian economist Tunji
Andrews told DW that the fuel subsidy's scrappage was not what tipped the
Nigerian economy over the edge.
"The downturn had been
before he came into office," said Andrews. "The removal just made it
harder. It increased inflation, which is natural. It just made it harder for
most people to be able to live."
And it is ordinary citizens who have been bearing the brunt of the slump because Nigerian wages have not kept up with the rising cost of living.
"The hardship in the land
is very, very alarming," one protester in Lagos told DW. "The
masses of Nigerians are suffering, and the federal governments are not doing
the needful. They made a lot of promises and they have not fulfilled one."
Tinubu inherited a range of
challenges from his predecessor, Muhammadu Buhari. High unemployment, record
inflation and widespread insecurity.
During Tinubu's election
campaign, he vowed to deal with these issues, but the unions say his government
has failed to deliver on his promises — including a monthly wage increase
for all workers, payments to millions of vulnerable households, and the rollout
of gas-powered buses for mass transit.
Andrews said that Nigerians
all need basics such as food, transport and power.
"I think if they can have
that, Nigerians are very resilient, and they will create jobs for
themselves," he told DW.
"If they can get adequate
power, if the food prices can reduced and the removal of petrol prices, then
I'm sure that there will be some short-term succor for the average Nigerian.
Andrews acknowledged that the
crisis started even before Tinubu's government came into power.
"There had been the challenge
of liquidity, the economy had experienced some fragility," the
economist told DW.
"So there was fire, and
we then put petrol on it, and it exacerbated the scenario. It is my genuine
thought that it is not a Tinubu issue per se, but maybe the fact that his
policies could have been differently implemented for a better result."
Tinubu's government says it is
working to address the crisis.
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