Lagos (AFP) – Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari is
to take personal charge of the country’s crucial oil
portfolio, his spokesman said on Tuesday, as a deadline
loomed for him to finally nominate his cabinet.
Reports from
New York,
where Buhari
has been
attending the
UN General
Assembly,
quoted the
president as
saying he
would be
minister of
petroleum
resources,
with a junior
minister
taking charge
of day-to-day
affairs in the
sector.
“Confirmed. He said so,” his spokesman Femi Adesina
told AFP in a text message, without giving further details.
Buhari, 72, took office on May 29 after a landmark election
victory against Goodluck Jonathan — the first time an
opposition candidate has unseated an incumbent in the
country’s history.
The former military ruler has vowed that corruption and

the corrupt will have no place in his government and
vetting of potential candidates has been seen as delaying
his appointment of a senior ministerial team.
Buhari has made tackling the rot in the oil sector a
priority, as he seeks to cut endemic graft and put the
country’s crippled, crude-dependent finances on a firmer
footing.
Nigeria — Africa’s number one crude producer and biggest
economy — has been hit badly by a slump in global crude
prices since last year, squeezing government revenue.
Oil accounts for some 90 percent of Nigeria’s foreign
exchange earnings.
The president has vowed to recover “mind-boggling” sums
of stolen oil cash, starting with a drastic overhaul of
state-run oil firm the Nigerian National Petroleum
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