There are no online applications required for those set of Nigerians for
whom the monthly N5,000 Conditional Cash Transfer of the Buhari Social
Investment programmes are designed for.
This clarification was made today by Mr. Laolu Akande, the Senior Special
Assistant on Media in the Office of the Vice President in a chat with the
press.
He was responding to questions arising from what he described as some
misleading reports in the media regarding the implementation of the N500B
Social Investment Programmes of the Buhari administration.
The said media reports are based on a recent debate and resolution on a
motion in the Senate, titled “The Need to Avoid the Mismanagement of the
N500B Social Intervention Funds.”
According to Akande, “while we understand the need for an ongoing public
discussion of this unprecedented budgetary allocation in favor of the
Nigerian people especially the poorest and the most vulnerable, it is not
correct to claim any form of mismanagement or marginalization
whatsoever.”
He added that “ there has not been any disbursement from the allocated
fund not to talk of any kind of mismanagement at all. While it is true
that funds are being released for the social investment programmes, it is
rather preposterous for now to say there is no evidence where the funds
have gone to. As an administration noted for its transparency, we intend
to fully keep Nigerians posted of all financial expenditure in line with
extant laws of the country.”
The Presidential Spokesperson explained that “of the series of social
investment programmes we have outlined, only the job creation
scheme-N-Power requires an online registration from unemployed graduates
and non-graduate youths.”
Continuing, he noted that the Conditional Cash Transfer, CCT, which would
pay N5000 monthly to the most vulnerable and the poorest Nigerians-a total
of one million in the first year-“no online registration of any kind is
required,” Akande asserted.
Justifying the requirement for online registration for the hiring of
500,000 unemployed graduates, Akande said “it is important to explain,
again, for the benefit of clarity, that the requirement for online
application for the N-Power job scheme makes absolute sense considering
that all together the Federal Government is planning to hire half a
million unemployed Nigerian graduates.”
According to him, “we are all witnesses to the calamity that occurred in
the past when a manual effort was made to hire large number of Nigerian
youths. It led to needless deaths and outright chaos.”
Continuing the Spokesperson stated that “asking university graduates, for
instance, to apply online is not such a cumbersome or unattainable
requirement considering that JAMB, NECO, WAEC applications have all been
done online for a while now in this country.”
He said “what online applications do is to afford us as a government an
efficient and effective means to process the applications and select the
graduates and non-graduate youths for the N-Power job and training
programmes.”
On the claim that Borno State is not online and therefore the N-Power
process discriminates against people in the state for whom the programmes
are designed, Akande said such a claim “simply flies in the face of the
fact. Almost 15,000 Nigerians from Borno State applied in the first
application series of N-Power schemes online.”
According to him “it is also not tenable to argue that people in Maiduguri
for instance which today plays hosts to tonnes of international NGOs
cannot apply online or are denied internet access.”
He added that in states like Enugu there were over 20,000 applications
online for N-Power, disclosing that states with the lowest numbers like
Zamfara and Bayelsa had over 6,000 and 7,000 applications respectively.
Continuing he said “in any case we are aware that in several parts of the
country, there are reported instances where local leaders of goodwill
ensured that the people-unemployed graduates and youths- who did not
readily have access to the internet were adequately taken care of in
different ways including creating online registration points and outlets.”
He disclosed that the selection process for the first batch of 200,000
Nigerians to be engaged in the N-Power process has now been completed, and
that their official engagement is now awaiting the completion of BVN
verification so that they would be paid directly.
Asked how the selection was done, Akande said “Presidency officials
collaborated actively with the Ministries of Agriculture & Natural
Resources, Health and other government agencies all through the process.
There were no foreign consultants involved, nor is one needed.” He further
explained that to make up the selection of the first 200,000, there were
three criteria thus: 40% selected based on the number of applications per
state, a special mark-up for the 6 states of the Northeast and a
discretionary addition for states with low numbers of applicants.
Asked to comment on the comparison of the Buhari Social Investment with
the failed SURE-P, Akande argued that the Buhari Presidency has made “very
diligent and transparent efforts to ensure that the Social Investment
Programmes do not repeat the errors of the past, and the attempt therefore
to hurriedly compare the programmes with failed efforts of the past, like
SURE-P, even at this early stage is simply baseless.”
According to him, the Buhari Presidency conceived the Social Investments
Programmes as a means to effectively and efficiently touch the lives of
Nigerians, especially the unemployed and the poorest, and “we have
designed a full-proof process that will ensure that the goods are
delivered. There would not be any middle-men and the payments to be made
to the N-Power candidates, the monthly N5,000 to the poorest and most
vulnerable among others would be paid directly to them.”
He stated that “if and when clarifications are required on the programmes,
we would be very much willing to supply them in order to avoid such
misleading and unprofitable confusion of issues that has taken place in
the media on this matter recently.”