23,000 Artisan, Traders In First Batch In FG’s Soft Loan Scheme Across 13 States and FCT
Laolu Akande, Abuja: In consolidation of the Buhari
Presidency’s Social Investment Programmes (SIPs), the Federal Government
has so far disbursed 23,400 Soft loan to beneficiaries in 13 states
& Federal Capital Territory under the Government’s Enterprise and
Empowerment Programme (GEEP).
The States are Adamawa, Akwa Ibom,
Delta, Ekiti, Kogi, Kwara, Niger, Lagos, Osun and Ogun. Others are Oyo,
Ondo, Rivers and the FCT.
The Micro-credit scheme is a no-interest
loan scheme, with only a one-time 5% administrative fee for costs. The
loan is targeted at micro-enterprises: traders, artisans, market men and
women, entrepreneurs, farmers with the involvement of cooperatives and
executed through the Bank of Industry, BOI.
Although over 23,000
people have benefited from the loans, altogether, over 1 million people
have already enrolled for the programme across the country and are
expected to benefit this year.
To facilitate the loan
disbursement, four payment providers have been signed-on for the
programme mostly in the urban areas. The next wave of payment providers,
coming on stream by March 2017, would provide a much wider coverage in
the rural areas.
Equally, about 8,436 market associations and
cooperatives nationwide have been registered for this scheme through the
web portal (www.boi.ng/market), as well as through paper application
forms.
The loans range from N10,000, to N100,000 per applicant.
While the loans would be paid directly to individuals, they are expected
to belong to registered associations and/or cooperatives as the case
may be, to ensure that they are peer-endorsed as credible, and to
facilitate timely repayments. All beneficiaries must have BVNs and bank
accounts.
On the progress made with the National Homegrown School
Feeding Programme, actual feeding of pupils is expected to commence this
week in Ogun and Oyo States, while Ebonyi State will soon follow suit.
Contrary
to insinuations in some quarters and inaccurate reports in some
sections of the media, there are no payment issues or any kind of food
rationing taking place in states where the Homegrown School Feeding
Programme has kicked off.
While the Federal Government has paid
all approved cooks based on the number of pupils allocated to each cook,
it is the State that provides the number of pupils to be fed. And where
those figures change, the next batch of FG payment would reflect it.
Specifically,
where the number of pupils increase, the State will communicate the
increase and approve the review. The numbers of the new pupils are then
physically verified, before a commensurate number of cooks are engaged,
trained and then paid.
The FG has also adopted a system where it
pays the cooks a 10-day advance payment for feeding. The programme is
designed to ensure that no cook feeds more than 150 pupils a day, but in
some cases, the numbers are as low as 35 children per cook.
The
meal which must be sufficient and nutritious is costed around locally
sourced items and approved by the State under the N70 per child
provision by the Federal Government. Food quality is monitored at the
school level through the head teachers, the Parent Teachers Association,
PTA, and the State monitoring teams.
11 States have so far indicated their readiness to commence the school feeding programme having met FG’s set criteria.
The
progress so far recorded with the Homegrown School Feeding Programme,
the N-Power Teach for unemployed graduates, the Conditional Cash
Transfer for the poorest, and the GEEP underscores the Buhari
Presidency’s commitment to the plight of poor Nigerians and unemployed
youths in the country.
Efforts to ramp-up all the schemes are in top gear currently.
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