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Motorists, taxi motocyclists and people with jerry cans queue to buy fuel at a filling station in Lagos on March 3, 2015 |
Abuja
(AFP) - Nigeria hiked the price of petrol Wednesday after months of
fuel shortages caused by a foreign exchange shortage left Africa's
biggest economy running on fumes.
For
months drivers have been waiting for petrol in queues kilometres long,
while others were forced to buy fuel on the black market, sometimes for
triple the previous official price of 87 naira ($0.43) per litre.
The
new price hike introduced by President Muhammadu Buhari's
administration would see petrol being sold at gas stations for 145 naira
($0.73) per litre, Petroleum Resources Minister of State Emmanuel
Kachikwu said Wednesday a statement.
"The
main reason for the current problem is the inability of importers of
petroleum products to source foreign exchange at the official rate due
to the massive decline of foreign exchange earnings of the federal
government," Kachikwu said.
"We
expect that this new policy will lead to improved supply and
competition and eventually drive down pump prices," Kachikwu said.
"We
share the pains of Nigerians but, as we have constantly said, the
inherited difficulties of the past and the challenges of the current
times imply that we must take difficult decisions on these sorts of
critical national issues."
Despite
being one of Africa's largest oil producers, Nigeria has to import fuel
to meet the majority of demand as it wrestles with dilapidated
refineries working at a fraction of their capacity.
A
shortage of foreign exchange caused by low oil prices has left Nigeria
without cash to afford costly fuel subsidies that are popular with
voters but criticised for being a drain on the public purse.
In
2012 a petrol hike caused violent riots in the streets of Lagos, the
country's commercial hub, forcing then-president Goodluck Jonathan to
partially restore the subsidies.
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