Muhammadu Sanusi II, Emir of Kano and former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has urged ministers and presidential aides to prioritize honest advice over flattery, warning that sycophancy undermines governance and economic progress.
Speaking at the Oxford Global Think Tank Leadership Conference and Book Launch in Abuja, Sanusi stressed that Nigeria’s economic crisis didn’t happen overnight. “Many of the challenges we face today were predicted years ago, yet political considerations delayed necessary reforms,” he said.
Highlighting the fuel subsidy saga, Sanusi recalled, “In 2012, we warned that the subsidy was unsustainable, but politics took over. Now the same people who led protests against it have inherited the problem and had no choice but to do the right thing.”
The former CBN governor emphasized that effective leadership requires courage and truthfulness, not blind loyalty. He urged officials to focus on long-term planning, competence, and national interest rather than populism or political gain.
Sanusi’s message is a reminder that Nigeria’s path to economic recovery depends on honest counsel, accountability, and leaders willing to make difficult but necessary decisions.
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