Nigeria President Muhammadu Buhari
is to swear in members of his cabinet on Wednesday, a presidency
statement said on Sunday, ending a five-month wait for a cabinet to be
installed in Africa's most populace nation.
The
72-year-old former military ruler, who was inaugurated in late May, has
been criticised for waiting until September to name his ministers, who
then underwent a month-long Senate vetting process. Portfolios will be
assigned after ministers have been sworn in.
"President
Muhammadu Buhari will officially inaugurate a new Federal Executive
Council on Wednesday, November 11, 2015," said the emailed statement
from Buhari's spokesman Femi Adesina.
"Before
the commencement of the inaugural session of the council, the
ministers-designate will take their oaths of office in the Council
Chambers of the Presidential Villa," it said, adding that this would
begin at 10 am local time (0900 GMT).
Nigeria,
Africa's biggest economy and the continent's top oil producer, faces its
worst economic crisis in years brought on by the sharp fall in crude
prices since it relies on oil exports for 70 percent of government
revenue.
Critics of Buhari, who won March
elections after campaigning to rid Nigeria of widespread corruption,
said the absence of a ministers created a policy vacuum that exacerbated
the economic problems brought on by the fall in oil prices.
Buhari
took his 36 ministers on a retreat on Thursday and Friday during which
they were handed documents, seen by Reuters, which outlined the state of
the economy and the government's policy goals.
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