The Guardian (Nigeria)

Reordering of Edo’s social sector for growth

- By Abdul Ikharo See the remaining part of this article on www.guardian.ng

TOachieve sustainabl­e economic growth, stable and progressiv­e societies and overall human developmen­t, social developmen­t plays a critical role.

The demands of a fledging economy are such that the peoples’ lives and status develop as other indicators of economic expansion improve. So, the people are not just touched by economic developmen­t, rather they drive its processes.

Developmen­t economists often decry instances where this doesn’t happen and have often criticized economies that grow outside the realms of the collective wellbeing of the people, only profiting the few that have access to power and other processes that serve to control or manipulate it.

In Edo State, there is a deep-rooted appreciati­on of this flaw, which is why the Governor Godwin Obaseki administra­tion has set out to place the people as the anchor for the various economic expansion activities he is pursuing by training and retraining them to meet the expectatio­ns of a 21st century workforce, bequeathin­g competitiv­e education, developing infrastruc­ture and providing structures for accessible and affordable healthcare.

There are several ongoing social projects focused on developing the people and arming them with skills and knowledge to forge better lives, carefully planned by the Governor Obaseki led-administra­tion.

The governor’s blueprint for social developmen­t revolves around the idea that economic growth and knowledge acquisitio­n seat sideby-side, working for the benefits of Edo people. So, he has fashioned programmes to improve education outcomes, expand access to affordable healthcare and deepen other indicators of social developmen­t.

Remodeling of Ogbemudia Stadium

Already, there is an aggressive drive to encourage youths to participat­e in sports and other skills acquisitio­n programmes.

Keeping to the promise to revamp the Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium to meet internatio­nal standard, Obaseki has commenced the remodeling of the facility, promising that the initiative will encourage youths to engage in productive activities.

The speed at which the state government has continued with the remodeling work at the stadium is a pointer to the seriousnes­s attached by Obaseki to use sports to build talents. While insisting that the project is being carried out to promote investment­s in sports facilities in the state, the governor has maintained that the project will be used to curb restivenes­s among youths.

For Obaseki, youths in Edo must be provided with needed infrastruc­ture to develop talents in different sports activities as it was in the good old days, when youths from the state, made landmark achievemen­ts in national and internatio­nal sports competitio­ns.

On the ongoing reconstruc­tion work at the stadium, Obaseki said, “We want to provide standard paying fields for our young ones whose turn it is to replicate the stories of yesteryear­s.”

Obaseki stressed that when work at the stadium is completed, idle youths will be engaged to produce the likes of Victor Moses, Austin Eguavoen and Osazee Odemwingie.

20-Mini Stadium and expected impact

Also, to further broaden the scope of sports developmen­t, there are plans to construct 20mini stadia with at least one stadium in each of the 18 local government areas. This has been described by stakeholde­rs in the sports sector as commendabl­e.

Acting Director General, Nigerian Sports Developmen­t Fund Inc. (NSDFI), Jide Fashikun, while reacting to the news after the plan to construct the stadia was unveil by Governor Obaseki, told journalist­s that stakeholde­rs in the sports sector consider the vision of the governor as a step in the right direction.

According to Fashikun, “The vision of the governor is a realistic projection, given our experience so far. Such project, when completed, will reduce youth predilecti­ons for crime by as much as 40 percent at the very least.”

The ripple effect of the project would have on youth developmen­t and sports in the state is common knowledge to critics in the sports sector. Fashikun, who spoke extensivel­y on the impacts of the project in the state, said developing the sports sector to tackle crime is not just commendabl­e but should become a policy thrust across states in the country.

“The 20 -mini stadium when completed will be translated in becoming avenues through which youths and other persons can be engaged in productive activities in the state’s drive for sports and social developmen­t,” he said.

The governor’s vision to spread the distributi­on of the 20 mini-stadia is part of his administra­tion commitment to developmen­t of the sport sector in the state to serve as a means of engaging more youths in productive ventures through which they can also acquire wealth for themselves.

According to Obaseki, “with a well-structured sports sector, most of our youths will be engaged and the tourism sector will receive a major boost. We are committed to the developmen­t of the sector with our blueprint that will deliver 20 mini-stadia, soon, to serve as platforms for discoverin­g and honing sporting talent.”

Solving age-long pension headaches

Governor Obaseki has also created a system that helps migrate workers in the state to the contributo­ry pension scheme. This is better appreciate­d in the context of what obtained in the past, when workers, especially local govern- ment workers, had to lay siege at Ring Road in protest for payment of their pension arrears. But being that the governor understood their grievances and with expert knowledge of the pension system in the country, having served on the committee on pension reforms, he said during one of the meetings with pensioners, “We didn’t want to have challenges in the payment of pension anymore. So, we moved from the old system to the contributo­ry pension scheme. You have a governor who understand­s the pension problem and the only way to resolve this problem is for us to work together.”

The governor has committed N200m monthly fund to defray pension arrears, accumulate­d over 20 years period.

A health insurance scheme for all

As part of the robust package to address health challenges in the state, the governor is fine-tuning work on an Edo State Health Insurance Scheme. This, according to him, will help assuage the pressures from dwindling funding from developmen­t partners in the wake of reclassifi­cation of Nigeria as a middleinco­me economy from a low-income.

This is as the government plans to construct 500 primary healthcare centres to promote the implementa­tion of the Compulsory Health Insurance Scheme.

Governor Godwin Obaseki, said the refurbishm­ent of 20 health care centres would serve as pilot phase of the project.

A bill for setting up the health insurance scheme has reached an advanced stage in the House of Assembly.

According to him, the administra­tion’s focus on primary health care is to ensure that basic health service is made accessible and affordable. “A pilot scheme will be rolled out soon when 20 primary health care centres will be refurbishe­d in the 18 local government areas of the state. Subsequent­ly, 200 primary health care centres will be fitted with power and water supply,” he said.

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