Indications have emerged that the President is likely to head the 
Ministry of Petroleum Resources in the new cabinet, rather than trust 
anyone else with the source of most of Nigeria’s revenue, just like 
President Olusegun Obasanjo did for about five years of the his 
eight-year tenure as civilian leader.
According to one of Buhari’s long-standing associates who spoke on 
condition of anomymity, Nigeria’s oil sector is so dirty that nobody’s 
hands are clean enough to do the “surgical changes” needed.
Another associate said: “Buhari will do it. It would be stupid to give that position to anyone else.”
According to the first source, Buhari has still not settled on his 
cabinet and has laughed off speculation in the media about those he will
 appoint. Joking with friends as he read out a newspaper article that 
mentioned possible names: 'They have picked my ministers for me. Have I 
even told you who I want?'
“It’s going to be a lean government, I doubt he’ll have 42 ministries 
like Jonathan but he must have at least 36 (for the number of states) as
 prescribed by the constitution, though it does not specify whether they
 have to be senior or junior,” an adviser in the ruling APC party told 
Reuters.
Buhari's camp had not yet gone through reports on Jonathan’s handover notes on policy, the adviser said.
“There is a huge body of proposals being bandied around the place,” the 
advisor said, adding that Buhari plans to let the N60 billion a year 
amnesty programme end in December as scheduled to save money and it is 
unclear what he will fund in its place.
He has also made it clear that he wants to revamp Nigeria’s refining 
sector, which declined while the country became dependent on imports for
 fuel.
The APC source added. “He (Buhari) is emotionally attached to the 
refineries because he built some of them. He wants them to start 
functioning again.”

 
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