FG Didn’t Relocate Ministerial Briefings to London, Minister Dismisses Reports

The New Diplomat
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By Kolawole Ojebisi

The Federal Government has debunked reports making the rounds that the Ministerial Press Briefing Session has been relocated from Abuja to London.

The Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, stated that some traditional and online media fuelled the speculation by widely publishing the unverified report.

Idriss dismissed the viral report during his opening remarks at the ongoing eighth edition of the Ministerial Press Briefing Session, held at the National Press Centre in Abuja.

The session was attended by the Minister of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy, Hannatu Musawa; the Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Professor Joseph Utsev; and the Minister of Works, Senator David Umahi.

“This is your answer to the insinuation that the press briefing session is relocating to abroad. We have our responsibility first to the Nigerian nation and that’s why we invite these ministers to come here and address Nigerians and those outside this country directly from nowhere but the National Press Centre here in Abuja.

“So if you think that the ministerial press briefing, for those who are already making the insinuation that it’s being moved outside this country, is false. The platform that the Federal Ministry of Information and National Orientation is providing, is what is happening here in the country,” he said.

Similarly, the Minister of Works, Senator David Umahi, who was reported to be among the ministers scheduled to unveil President Tinubu’s achievements at a press briefing in London, affirmed the position of the Minister of Information and National Orientation, stating that the report is untrue.

Idris used the occasion to applaud the performance of the economy, noting a marked improvement reflected in the gradual decline of the headline inflation rate as reported by the National Bureau of Statistics.

“Today, I am pleased to announce encouraging news from the National Bureau of Statistics, which released the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for April 2025, yesterday. According to the report, the headline inflation rate for April stood at 23.71%, representing a decrease of 0.52% from the 24.23% recorded in March 2025. Similarly, month-on-month, inflation dropped by a notable 2.04%, from 3.90% in March to 1.86% in April.

“This has not happened by chance. The President’s focused interventions are clearly paying off. The benefits of reform, though gradual, are real and measurable,” he said.

He continued, “One of the key indicators of relief is the food inflation rate. While food prices remain an important concern for many Nigerians, the year-on-year food inflation rate eased to 21.26% in April. On a month-on-month basis, it slowed to 2.06%, down from 2.18% in March. This positive movement has largely been driven by price reductions in staple items such as maize flour, wheat grain, yam flour, okro, soya beans, rice, and beans.

“Ladies and gentlemen, we acknowledge that we are not yet where we desire to be. But these latest figures give us every reason to be hopeful. They show that the hard decisions are beginning to bear fruit. And as inflation eases, we expect to see corresponding improvements in consumer purchasing power and living conditions “

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