President Muhammadu Buhari has
reaffirmed the pledged that his government will not rest until the
remaining Chibok girls kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists since April
2014 are safely reunited with their families.
According to the Senior Special
Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Garba Shehu,
President Buhari renewed the commitment Monday in Katowice, Poland, at a
bilateral meeting with Swiss President Alain Berset, on the margins of
the UN Climate Change Conference (COP24).
The President had spent the whole day at
the International Conference Centre, Katowice, where he delivered his
national address at the opening of the 12-day meeting of COP24, met with
several world leaders and visited the impressive Nigerian pavilion at
the climate summit.
During his meeting with the Swiss
President, the Nigerian leader thanked the Swiss Confederation for its
efforts and important role as intermediaries to secure the release of
some Chibok girls and assured him that the issue of the remaining
kidnapped girls and other abducted persons will remain a ”key priority”
for the Nigerian government.
President Buhari and his Swiss
counterpart discussed joint strategies to ensure the safe return of the
girls, building on the past successes of securing the release of some of
the Chibok girls and other abducted persons in the North Eastern part
of Nigeria.
The President also welcomed the Swiss
President’s commitment to continue providing humanitarian assistance to
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Nigeria and to ensure the safe
release of the abducted school girls.
”We will continue to make the safe
release of the remaining Chibok girls a priority and will welcome any
kind of support from any quarters to make this happen, ” the President
said.
In separate bilateral meetings with the
President of Poland, Andrzej Duda and the Prime Minister, Mateusz
Morawiecki, President Buhari commended the country for a successful
outing at the opening of the COP24 meeting in Katowice.
The President told his Polish
counterpart that Nigeria was facing serious climate change challenges,
particularly the receding Lake Chad, which is a source of livelihood to
some 40 million people living in the region.
”Nigeria is totally committed to global
efforts to mitigate and adapt to effects of climate change,” President
Buhari told the Polish leader, whose country is the president of COP24.
In his meeting with Prime Minister
Morawiecki, the President lauded the plan by the Polish Government to
open a Trade Office in Lagos soon, promising that investors who look to
Nigeria can be ”guaranteed” of safe returns on their investments.
”We have a vibrant and active young
population and our government is doing so much on the Nigerian economy,
including diversifying to non-oil sectors.
”We welcome increased cooperation with
Poland and will encourage investments in other sectors of the economy
like solid minerals and information technology, ” the President said.
Morawiecki told President Buhari that
traditionally 96 per cent of oil imports to Poland come from Saudi
Arabia and Russia, adding ”but now we are looking at importing oil from
Nigeria.”
The Prime Minister noted that as the
fastest growing economy in the European Union, Poland has identified
Nigeria, Egypt and South Africa, as three top investment destinations in
Africa.
”We want the hub of our investment
destination to be in Nigeria,” the Polish Prime Minister told President
Buhari, welcoming the pledge by the Nigerian leader to immediately put
in place a framework to encourage more Polish investments in Nigeria.
Meanwhile, the President’s bilateral
meeting with his Austrian counterpart, Alexander Van der Bellen, focused
on the challenges of Lake Chad and what was required to recharge it.
Noting that the Lake faced the two
challenges of technology and financing, President Buhari told the
Austrian leader that enormous financial resources and technology were
required to transfer water to Lake Chad from the Congo Basin.
Van der Bellen, who indicated his
country’s interest to cooperate with Nigeria on recharging the Lake
Chad, talked about climate change challenges in Austria including
drought, glaciers melting, among others.
President Buhari also met with Dutch
Prime Minister Mark Rutte and both leaders followed up on their past
discussions, during their last meeting in The Hague, Netherlands, in
July, which centred on trade, investments and partnerships in
agriculture.
The President welcomed the proposal by
the Dutch Prime Minister to visit Abuja soon and promised that the
Nigerian government will continue to provide a conducive business
environment for existing and prospective Dutch investors.
On the sidelines of COP24, President Buhari also met with the Prime Minister of Estonia, Jüri Ratas.
The Prime Minister of the Northern
European country sought Nigeria’s support on its bid for a non-permanent
seat at the UN Security Council for 2020-2021.
The two leaders also discussed bilateral cooperation and climate change mitigation.
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