Co-Founder
of the ONE Campaign, lead-singer of the Irish multi-award winning
rock-band, and philanthropist, Mr. Paul David Hewson, also known as
Bono (U2), on Tuesday, thanked the 8th National Assembly for
including a clause in the 2018 budget that guarantees the use of 1%
of the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation for primary
healthcare.
In
a statement signed by Olu Onemola, the special assistant on New Media
to the President of the Senate, Bono gave the commendation when he
paid a courtesy visit to the President of the Senate, Dr. Abubakar
Bukola Saraki, in Abuja.
He
stated that he was in the National Assembly to commend the
legislators for being the first National Assembly in the history of
Nigeria to get the 1% clause passed.
“You
made it happen,” Bono said to the President of the Senate, “People
were, and have been talking about it for many years, but nobody was
doing anything about it.
“But
you made the 1% for healthcare happen. Nobody wants earmarks, but you
made it happen. Its going to be really important for people’s
lives. The decisions made in this building are decisions of life and
death in this case, so, we thank you for making the decision for
people that we may never even meet.”
Responding,
Saraki, who received the visitors in the company of Senate Minority
Leader, Senator Biodun Olujimi and Senator Dino Melaye, stated that
he had his colleagues from both the Senate and the House of
Representatives to thank for the passage of the 1% appropriation for
healthcare in the 2018 budget.
Saraki
also told his visitors that as a medical doctor, he saw the
improvement of primary healthcare across Nigeria as a necessity and
hoped that moving forward, the efficient implementation of the 1% for
Primary Healthcare would be addressed.
The
President of the Senate said: “The issue now is to get the 1%
allocation out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF) operational, so
that we can begin to improve our primary healthcare system across the
country.
“What
we need to consider now is to see how that fund can be seed capital
for the private sector to come in and expand the system. Depending on
government to build these healthcare centres and make them functional
on a long-term basis is not going to work.
“I
have had the opportunity to be a Governor for eight years, where I
pushed the health insurance scheme in partnership with the private
sector, so I have seen it work.
“Let
the private sector be responsible for sustaining this because they
can do it better than government. Let’s say the 1% out of the CRF
adds up to a N1 trillion for example, government should make that
their contribution, then, we should get the private sector to come
in, make their own contributions and manage it.
“Otherwise,
we will find out that every year, we will have the same budgetary
provisions for this 1% Clause for Healthcare and that we have not
moved forward in improving our primary healthcare system,” he
stated.
The
U2 lead singer was accompanied on the visit by Gayle Smith, the
president and CEO of the ONE Campaign; Tom Freston, chairman of the
ONE Campaign; Kathy McKeirnan, director of Communications; Innocent
Edache, Communications and Advocacy Manager of the ONE Campaign;
Douglas Alexander, chairman of the Board of UNICEF UK; John Spears,
chief of staff to the President of the ONE Campaign; and Serah Makka,
the Nigeria Country Director for the ONE Campaign.
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