Culled from Premium Times:
America’s richest man, Bill Gates, has cancelled his scheduled March 27 official visit to Nigeria, in response to the controversial pardon granted by President Goodluck Jonathan to ex-convicts Diepreye Alamieyeseigha and Shettima Bulama, PREMIUM TIMES can authoritatively report today.
Mr. Gates
was due in Nigeria March 27 and 28 to meet President Goodluck Jonathan, state
governors and officials of the Federal Ministry of Health concerning the
aggressive polio eradication campaign his Bill and Melinda Foundation is
undertaking in the country.
That trip,
authoritative diplomatic sources said, has now been cancelled, two days after
the U.S. government expressed disappointment with its Nigerian counterpart for
pardoning convicted money launderers and warned it might cut aid meant for the
country.
“I can
confirm to you that Mr. Gates won’t be coming as scheduled,” one of our sources
told PREMIUM TIMES Monday morning. “The body language of Washington D.C. does
not support his travelling to Nigeria. The thinking here is that the
Nigerian government has high tolerance level for corruption and should be
ostracized in all ways possible.”
Our sources
said Mr. Gates has already instructed his staff to inform the Nigerian
presidency, the secretariat of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum and the Federal
Ministry of Health that he was no longer coming.
Presidential
spokesperson, Reuben Abati, did not answer or return calls seeking comment.
Contacted, the Director General of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Asishana
Okauru, said he would have to check with his staff whether any such
communication had come from Mr. Gates’ office. He did not answer or return
subsequent calls. Mr. Gates’ office is not opened as at the time of this report
as calls were unanswered.
But checks
by this newspaper indicate that the U.S. government has dissuaded Mr. Gates
from coming to Nigeria.
“The State
Department has advised him that Nigeria is not conducive for such visit at this
time,” another source said. “We hope that the Nigerian government will
get the message and return to the path of sanity.”
The
controversial pardon granted Messrs Alamieyeseigha and Bulama had on Friday
sparked fierce diplomatic row between Nigeria and the United States, with
the Americans threatening to punish Nigeria over Mr. Jonathan’s action and
Nigeria accusing the Americans of meddlesomeness.
“We see this
as a setback for the fight against corruption, and also for our ability to play
the strong role we’ve played in supporting rule of law and legal
institution-building in Nigeria, which is very important for the future of the
country obviously,” State Department spokesperson, Victoria Nuland, had told
reporters in Washington.
“We
have made clear to the Nigerians that this puts a question mark on the kinds of
work that we’ve been trying to do with them.”
The U.S. is
the world’s top donor. In 2012, it spent about $226 million on health and
governance programmes in Nigeria. And about $600million has been requested for
2013, according to U.S. government data. That is apart from what American
private foundations such as Mr. Gates’ spend on Nigeria’s government and
non-governmental organisations.
Mr. Gate is
the biggest foreign supporter of the campaign to eradicate polio in Nigeria and
has worked consistently with the Nigerian authorities since 2009 over the
matter. His foundation has developed a six-year strategy through 2018 that will
help combat polio in Nigeria, Pakistan and Afghanistan and has set aside
$1billion per annum for the purpose.
The bulk of
that money is meant for Nigeria which currently has the highest cases of polio
in the world. Mr. Gates’ efforts has seen improvements which helped
Pakistan reduce the number of polio cases from 198 in 2011 to 56 in 2012; and
Afghanistan from 80 to 35 during the same period.
The
situation in Nigeria worsened during the same period, increasing from 62
in 2011 to 119 in 2012.
Mr. Gates
last visited Nigeria in November 2012. During that visit, his foundation
entered into a four-year alliance with the Dangote Foundation which promised to
provide funding, equipment and technical support to the Kano state government
to strengthen polio immunisation.
He had
scheduled this March’s visit to consolidate that alliance, meet with President
Jonathan, state governors and other stakeholders with a view to generally
revving up the war against the pandemic.
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