Ex-President Goodluck Jonathan’s Minister of Communication Technology 
(ComTech), Mrs. Omobola Johnson, has accused President Muhammadu Buhari 
of being unfair to ministers who worked hard, but didn’t make much noise
 about it.

Buhari: Ministers are noise makers…
 
Johnson, was reacting to a statement credited to President Buhari, in
 an interview during his three-day official visit to France, where he 
stated that it’s the civil servants and technocrats who do the real job 
of governance in Federal government ministries more than the ministers, 
who he described as noise makers.
The ex-ComTech minister who reacted to Buhari’s statement via her 
Twitter handle @OmobolaJohnson said: “President Buhari is being unfair 
to Ministers who work hard and don’t make noise. The civil service is 
broken and it needs to be fixed.”
However, President Buhari who departed Nigeria for France on Monday, 
during an exclusive interview with France 24 tv François Picard, on 
Wednesday, said he intends to stick with his decision to name his 
cabinet before the end of the month, but however, opined that ministers 
are only there to “make a lot of noise.”
Asked if the absence of a finance minister was affecting the Nigerian
 capital market and economy, Buhari said: “No. It is what we know –and 
which we learnt from the western system. The civil service provides the 
continuity, the technocrat. And in any case, they are those that do most
 of the work.
“The ministers are there, I think, to make a lot of noise; for the 
politicians to make a lot of noise. But the work is being done by the 
technocrats. They are there; they have to provide the continuity, dig 
into the records and then guide us, [those of us] who are just coming 
in.
“They have been there, some of them for 15 years, some for 20 years. 
So I think this question of ministers is political. People from 
different constituencies want to see their people directly in 
government, and see what they can get out of it.
Ex-ComTech minister, Omobola Johnson
 
“As for the cabinet, I said we will have one by the end of the month,
 and time flies. The end of the month is coming too quickly for my 
liking.
“Yeah, I will stick to it. I will send the names to the national assembly.”
Reminded by Picard that “some have quipped that the country runs 
better without ministers”, the President said: “When you started 
introducing me, you said I was around 1983 to 1985. Even then we had 
ministers. So under this system, we have to have ministers; and we are 
going to have ministers.”
 
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