FG suspends N-Power scheme, begins its audit

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By Ahmed Ubandoma

The Federal Government has temporarily suspended the N-Power Programme of the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation to give way for proper audit of the programme.

The Federal Government kick-started the N-Power scheme on June 8, 2016 to address issues of youth unemployment and help to increase social development.

The scheme was created as a component of governmentโ€™s National Social Investment Programme.

Dr Akindele Egbuwalo, National Programme Manager of N-Power announced its suspension in a statement he issued on Sunday in Abuja.

Egbuwalo stated that the suspension and audit of the scheme became necessary to give room for a detailed investigation into N-Powerโ€™s operations in the last 12 months.

He added that 960,000 Nigerians were enrolled in the scheme since its inception to date.

โ€œThere is the need to audit the number of people still under the scheme because most of them have exited from N-POWER 1.0 and N-POWER 2.0 Batch A and Batch B.

โ€œThe audit is also necessary to establish the number of people that have exited the programme; those who are being owed; and how funds have been utilised over the years,โ€™โ€™ he explained.

Egbuwalo stated that some beneficiaries who concluded their programme since 2022 were still expecting payment from government.

โ€œRecently, we discovered instances of programme beneficiaries whose participation had lapsed since 2022 but have stayed on and continued to expect payment from government.

โ€œSome beneficiaries do not report to their places of primary assignments as required, but still receive monthly payments.

โ€œSome have other jobs and have left this bracket, but are still benefiting from payments, while those who truly worked are not paid.

โ€œThese instances call for a thorough audit of the scheme,โ€™โ€™ he stated.

Egbuwalo assured Nigerians that government would prioritise claims of those owed between eight months and nine months stipends after ascertaining the veracity of their claims.

โ€œGraduates and non-graduate volunteers Batch C1 & Batch C2 are in this category. We want to establish the exact number of people owed and the total cost implication to eliminate ghost beneficiaries.

โ€œOur preliminary findings show that some consultants are holding on to beneficiariesโ€™ funds disbursed to them long ago, even when their contract ended in March 2023 without a renewal.

โ€œWe condemn this practice and will not tolerate it going forward,โ€™โ€™ he stated.

Egbuwalo added that work was on-going to identify culprit consultants to ascertain why the payments did not get to the beneficiaries.

Such funds would be recalled and paid to affected beneficiaries, he assured.

โ€œWe assure all beneficiaries with genuine claims that we will resolve their cases once we complete the verification and honour all valid outstanding obligations.

โ€œWe appeal to Nigerians to understand the rationale behind the temporary suspension and investigation of the scheme as we work to restore the nationโ€™s confidence in it,โ€™โ€™ he stated.

Egbuwalo expressed governmentโ€™s determination to restructure and expand the programme to accommodate persons within the ages of 18 years and 40 years as against the previous age limit of 35 years.

โ€œThe restructuring will accommodate some new programmes in education, health, works, agriculture, technology, fashion, entertainment, and other relevant areas of skills acquisition and employability.

โ€œWe are targetingย five million beneficiaries in five years at a rate of one million beneficiaries per year under the graduate and non-graduate streams,โ€™โ€™ Egbuwalo also stated. (NAN)

Edited by Alli Hakeem

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