Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari leaves for South Africa on Thursday

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President Buhari will leave for South Africa tomorrow December 3rd to participate in the Forum on China/Africa Cooperation (FOCAC). A statement issued by the Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, says that during the forum Buhari will have a meeting with Chinese president, Xi Jinping, on how to re-commence stalled rail projects under new terms that would see China providing nearly all the financing required.

See the statement in part:

“Of particular interest is the coastal railway project stretching for 1,402 kilometres linking Lagos in the west with Calabar in the South; a project that is expected to be financed with $12 billion Chinese loan and which will create about 200,000 jobs. Another rail project that will be up for renegotiation is the $8.3bn Lagos-Kano standard gauge modernisation project, of which only a segment, Kaduna-Abuja, had reached completion stage. President Buhari is also expected to discuss ways of removing all obstacles in the way of the 3,050 MW Mambila Power Station, considered a strategic project which was conceived in 1982 but has not taken off. The Chinese president had informed President Buhari of the willingness of his country to finance the whole project through a special loan agreement,” the statement said.

Those to accompany him on the trip are: (1) Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyema; (2) Minister of Transportation, Chubuike Amaechi; and (3) the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Okechukwu Enelamah. They should be due back to the country on Saturday December 5.

1 thought on “Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari leaves for South Africa on Thursday

  1. Our indefatigable President, GMB, is making serious moves to improve the infrastructure of transportation in Nigeria. If this agreement is reached between China and Nigeria, it will create about 400,000 jobs. This is impressive and will help to curb the wastage of our youth’s potential; most of the jobless youths will be employed by the transportation industry. Bravo!

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