The federal government has
said its decision to partially deregulate the downstream sector of the
petroleum sector would enhance its school feeding programme.
Minister of Information,
Lai Mohammed, stated this yesterday, when a federal government delegation, led
by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, David Babachir Lawal, met
with members of the National Working Committee and State Executive Committees
of All Progressives Congress, APC, in Abuja. Lai Mohammed At the meeting called
to discuss the issues thrown up by deregulation, Mohammed listed several
impacts the policy would have on Nigerians. He said, “The first is the
employment of 500,000 unemployed graduates, the second is the employment of
100,000 non graduates, technicians and artisans.
The third is the one meal
a day programme targeting 5.5 million pupils all over Nigeria. This is the most
exciting of all our programmes. Even if we are going to give these children one
egg a day, it means we will need 5.5 million eggs and in a calendar year of 200
days, we will need over a billion eggs.
You can imagine what this
will do to agriculture. “We have the enterprise scheme which is a system of
revolving loan. We are targeting one million market women and men, 460,000
artisans and technicians and 200,000 agricultural workers to be given loans
through their cooperatives to start their own businesses.
We have the N5,000
conditional cash transfers to one million most vulnerable Nigerians as a first
phase. Then finally, we have bursaries, scholarships for all students in
Nigeria studying science, technology, engineering and mathematics.” National
Chairman of the party, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, said such meetings would be
convened on a regular basis so party members would understand government’s
policy.
He said: “What this does
is to arm everyone of us from the national and state levels so that we can
speak with confidence, in addition to whatever passion we can muster about what
is going on at the national level and go away with the conviction that things
are not just happening capriciously with the conviction that we promised
change. Change is a process, it is not an event, not something that happens the
day after the government was sworn-in.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment