The President of the Nigerian Senate, Senator Godswill Akpabio, and the US Ambassador to Nigeria, Richard M. Mills Jnr. held talks on Wednesday to strengthen relations between Nigeria and the United States.
The meeting was held when the ambassador visited the Senate President at the National Assembly in Abuja, where they expressed their desire for a more robust diplomatic relations between the two countries.
According to the statement by the special assistant on Media/Communication to the President of the Senate, Anietie Ekong, Akpabio said that Nigeria and the US had a shared goal of operating a democratic system as Nigeria’s democracy was modelled after the American system and stressed the need to nurture and preserve it.
“These are very difficult times but I’m happy my distinguished colleagues are here and we are having this engagement. This is a visit we have been looking forward to and even proposing to visit you and have an overview of the current situation between our two countries.
“I thank you for receiving me during the 249th Independence Anniversary of your country. I congratulate you. That means you have practised democracy for 249 years. We can’t say we have done the same in Nigeria.
“The collaboration between our countries is there and our democracy and system of government is modelled after the United States of America.
“One thing that I do know is that America has remained prosperous and has assisted many countries in the world because of the strong belief that: In God we trust.
“In Nigeria despite our religious and ethnic diversities, we also believe that God is the greatest. So we share something in common. You are welcome to the 10th Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” Akpabio said.
Responding, Ambassador Mills Jnr. said that he was in the Senate to talk with the President of the Nigerian Senate about the US-Nigeria relations and how the two countries could strengthen the relations between them.
He said that he would explore how the United States Mission in particular could further their shared goals and also get a sense of the legislative agenda of the Nigerian Senate in the coming year.
GIK/APA