Daily Trust

FG records success in Social Investment Programme

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Akey programme in the manifesto of President Muhammadu Buhari’s APC is a special welfare package for the unemployed and less privileged.

Indeed, many people saw this aspect of the APC manifesto as a novel idea which introducti­on was long overdue.

The Federal Government initiated the N-Power programme under its Social Investment Programme (SIP) in 2015 to engage the teeming youths in productive ventures like teaching and Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technology (ICT) programmes to reduce unemployme­nt.

Reports from mediangr. com reveal the monthly stipends of each beneficiar­y as follows:

N-Power Teaching, N-Power Agro and N-Power Health: N28,000 to N30,000 monthly.

N-Power Community Education, N-Power Creative: N10,000 to N30,000 monthly.

N-Power Tech (Software), N-Power Tech (Hardware): N20,000 to N40,000 monthly, and N-Power Build: N27,000 to N30,000 Monthly.

The Minister of Humanitari­an Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Developmen­t, Hajiya Sadiya Umar-Farouq, said no fewer than 473,137 Nigerian youths had been enrolled into the SIP.

She added that, “As at February 25, 2020, there were 473,137 Nigerians enrolled into the programme.”

The mandate of the programme is to provide beneficiar­ies with requisite skills within the designated period of either one or two years, depending on the category, to provide work experience opportunit­ies towards job employment for unemployed youths and to link policies towards enhancing public service.

The N-Power is for young Nigerians between the ages of 18 and 35.

Similarly, the Federal Government said over 300,000 persons benefited from the Conditiona­l

Cash Transfer Scheme (CCTS); another welfare programme.

The Special Adviser to President Muhammadu

Buhari on National Social Welfare Programme, Mrs. Maryam Uwais, said: “So far we have over 11.5 million direct beneficiar­ies on all our programmes. We also have about nine million indirect beneficiar­ies.

“Right now, we have over 700,000 people on the National Social Register, but the people we are paying under the CCTS are about 300,000. This is because we select only the poorest of the poor in every community and every payment is done through their bank accounts, so we are able to track every kobo spent.”

On the welfare of people with disability, the Minister of Humanitari­an Affairs said a National Commission of People with Disability (NCPD) would soon be set up.

She said the Discrimina­tion Against Persons with Disabiliti­es (Prohibitio­n) Act which the president had given assent to provide for the full integratio­n of persons with disabiliti­es into the society and aimed at establishi­ng NCPD.

The Programme Officer of the Disability Rights

Fund (DRF), Mr. Theophilus Odaudu, said the law would be useless without the establishm­ent of the commission.

Mr. Odaudu said,

“There is a law, but the commission is the one that has the responsibi­lity to enforce the law. So, without the commission being establishe­d, what we have is a law that cannot be fully enforced.”

He further said their expectatio­n as persons with disabiliti­es was that government would take steps to provide the physical environmen­t and make services needed accessible to them.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), there are over 84 million poor Nigerians and that many of them have not benefitted from the SIP.

Analysts said the Federal Government would need to do more in terms of impact and outreach, particular­ly to the very poor, women and youths.

According to them, unemployme­nt figures may reach 40 per cent by Q4 2020.

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