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Saturday, October 26, 2024

FG to create 5 million jobs for youths in 5 years – Edu

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The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Dr Betta Edu has disclosed that the Federal Government of  Nigeria has set a target of five million jobs for youths in five years through the N-Power, which is undergoing a review.

The Minister also disclosed that the federal government is reviewing the N-Power programme to restore confidence in it.

She added that more programmes would be introduced in education, health, works, agriculture, technology, fashion and entertainment, The NATION reports.

Edu explained that the programme was suspended to allow for a detailed investigation into its operations in the last 12 months, assuring the beneficiaries with genuine claims that all outstanding obligations will be honoured once the verification is completed.

She said, “This action (suspension) has become necessary to give room for a detailed investigation into the operations of the N-Power in the last 12 months.

“The total number of persons enrolled on N-POWER since inception to date is 960,000. Most of them have exited from NPower 1.0 and NPower 2.0 batches A and B.

“There is a need to audit the number of people in the programme, those who have exited the programme, those who are being owed, whether they reported to work or not and how funds have been utilised over this period of time.

“Recently, we discovered instances of programme beneficiaries whose participation has lapsed since 2022 but have remained on and continue to expect payments from the government.

“In addition, some beneficiaries must honour their obligation to the programme: They do not report to their places of primary assignments as required but still receive monthly payments.

“Some have other jobs and have left this bracket but are still benefiting from the payments, while those who truly worked are not paid.

“These instances have made the need for a thorough audit imperative, as we also look into claims of those being owed for up to eight to nine months’ stipends to ascertain the veracity of their claims.

“The graduates and non-graduate volunteers Batch C1 & C2 are in this category.

“We want to establish the exact number of people owed and the total amounts, thereby eliminating ghost beneficiaries.

“Preliminary findings of our audit have shown that some consultants are holding on to beneficiaries’ funds disbursed to them long ago even when their contract ended in March 2023 without any renewal.

“We condemn this practice and will not tolerate it going forward.

“Work is ongoing to identify those involved, understand why the payments didn’t get to the final beneficiaries, and recall the funds to pay those owed.

“We appeal to Nigerians to understand the rationale behind the temporary suspension and investigation of the programme as we work to restore the nation’s confidence in the programme and for the new N-Power to serve Nigerians better.

“Things have to be properly done for us to move forward.”

Edu said the restructuring will birth an expanded programme to reach beneficiaries aged 18-40 (the previous age limit was 35).

The minister added: “To earn the confidence of Nigerians in the expanded programme, transparency and accountability will be the benchmark.

“It shall no longer be business as usual as we make concerted efforts to put the nation on the right footing, ensuring that no one directly or indirectly unleashes suffering on Nigerians.

“We assure all beneficiaries with genuine claims that we will resolve their cases once we complete the verification exercise and honour all valid outstanding obligations. Nobody will be owed.”

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