When the now ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), was campaigning prior to the 2015 president election, one of the key promises it made to Nigerians was to put in place a social benefit program that would see poor Nigerians getting a monthly stipend of N5,000.
After it won the election in a landslide, with President Muhammadu Buhari defeating
the sitting president, Goodluck Jonathan, it was with bated breaths
that Nigerians waited for the promises to start unfolding but the
stories kept changing by the day.
At a
point, Nigerians were told that the stipends would be paid to the
poorest of the poor and the vulnerable and that it would soon take off.
But
after a long delay that crept on for close to two years, the government
has announced that the scheme has started off in at least nine states
with more to follow.
In a statement signed by Laolu Akande, the spokesperson to Vice President, Yomi Osinbajo, the payments have already begun in earnest.
The statement reads in part:
‘As part of its determined efforts to touch the lives of Nigerians positively, the Buhari administration has now started the
payment of N5, 000 monthly stipends to the poorest and the most
vulnerable in the country through the Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) of
its Social Investment Programmes, (SIP).
Under
the CCT, one million Nigerians would receive N5, 000 monthly payments
as a form of social safety net for the poorest and most vulnerable as
budgeted for in the 2016 Budget.
The
first batch that commenced last week, nine states would be covered, and
many of the beneficiaries have already reported receiving their first
payments by Friday last week, December 30, 2016.’
Nice
moves, one would say and commend the government on fulfilling one of
its promises, even though it took more than one and half years to
commence.
But
the boggling question this program beg to answer is how the poorest and
the most vulnerable in the society would be captured. Though the
government says it would rely on the existing Social Register created by
the affected states, one wonders if the real poor people are the one
captured and not the politicians and their protégées.
It
is a known fact in Nigeria that those in positions of authority always
find ways to circumvent any government policies to their own benefit
instead of allowing it to get to those they are meant for.
They
see government money as their own and it would not be a surprise to
find out that most of those who would be captured on the registers are
names submitted by politicians with the monies going into their pockets
while the real recipients, the real vulnerable people would end up not
getting anything at all.
Nigerians are
also telling the government that with the social benefit project safely
on the ground, the economy should be considered as 90% of the citizens
are still vulnerable to the recession, economic hardship, unemployment,
lack of infrastructure, the high cost of living and hunger.
The
government should up its game in making sure Nigerians start to reap
the dividends of democracy instead of the continued hardship being
experienced and this should be done by enacting people-friendly policies
and interventions that would take the country out of the woods.
After all, the present regime rode into power on the promise of change, so the change should be seen as all-inclusive.
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