Peter Obi, the Labour Party’s presidential candidate in the 2023 election, has lamented the announced pullout of British pharmaceutical firm GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) from Nigeria after 51 years.
This comes after the business announced plans to stop producing its operation/business in Nigeria.
The international pharmaceutical business indicated in a statement to the Nigerian Exchange Limited that it will shift to a third-party direct distribution model for its pharmaceutical products.
In a tweet on Friday night, Obi responded to the news by saying that the company’s reason for leaving Nigeria is even more upsetting because they no longer see the country as a business climate based on productivity.
These, he claims, are some of the repercussions of our economy’s accumulated poor management.
“As a result, millions are losing their jobs and our poverty index is worsening, even though we’re already being perceived as the world’s poverty capital,” the post read in part.
He further wrote, “The multinationals that are leaving our country have not only created jobs but have created immeasurable training that contributed immensely to our human capital development over the years.
“Now they are leaving our shores one after the other. GSK which has a manufacturing facility in Agbara, Ogun State on over 25 hectares of land had directly employed over 400 highly technical workers like pharmacists, microbiologists, biochemists, chemists, dentists, doctors etc, and also employed over 1000 other staff.
“It indirectly provided jobs and business opportunities for thousands of Nigerians across the nation. They are now leaving all these behind, and pushing more people back into unemployment.
“I have consistently maintained that in turning our nation around, we must move the economy from consumption to production, part of which included encouraging and supporting local and foreign investments, like GSK, in the country.
“The creation of an environment that creates and sustains multinationals to invest in our country is key to our dream of greatness. In the new Nigeria that we seek to create, the emphasis on production will encourage investors to stay and expand on our shores.”