The perceived failure of the SURE-P to translate to jobs as promised, has touched off at all states and Abuja
An ambitious pledge by the Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory, Olajumoke Akinjide,
of “massive” recruitment before year ending, has turned out an
elaborate deception, with just days away from December 31, 2012.
New slots of about 10,000 jobs were to be provided for Abuja under
the federal government subsidy reinvestment programme, the minister had
said.
But days to the year’s close, the openings are nowhere near reality.
Neither the advertisement, registration, pre-selection calls, nor
recruitment tests have taken place, PREMIUM TIMES has found.
Weeks of inquiries have proven the idea of preliminary registration
for the jobs as Ms. Akinjide announced separately in August and
November, to not only be a ruse, but a subject unknown to several
officials of the FCT administration. One official said the selection had
been concluded since March.
The contradictions come as the intervention programme, the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme, SURE-P,
faces mounting criticisms over its failure to deliver on proposed
projects, with critics dismissing the initiative as a drain pipe that
squanders badly needed funds, while unemployment, which it was partly
meant to address nationwide, escalates.
If anything, the inconsistencies at the Abuja ministry point to the
indifference authorities accord a pressing national need as jobs
creation, which are often eagerly promised by officials, but hardly
delivered.
Ms. Akinjide gave her promise as a passing remark while addressing two women groups in August and November.
“There will be massive employment before the end of this year and we
have started registration of unemployed women and youth in the FCT,” the
minister said in a remark to the National Council for Women Societies,
Abuja chapter, who visited her office on November 13.
Applicants were to be “be employed into different fields and also
vocation acquisition programmes,” of the SURE-P plan, the minister said.
To demonstrate seriousness, Ms. Akinjide advised interested women and
youth to register with the FCT Social Development Secretariat as of
November.
No registration
Repeated visits to the office and contacts to other arms of the FCT
administration supposedly responsible for the ‘recruitment’ since
November have proven no such job drives exist, and officials have
consistently denied knowledge of any job-related registration.
At various units of the FCT Secretariat at Area 10, Garki, Abuja, a
week after the minister’s promise, all key officials spoken to said they
were unaware of the plans. PREMIUM TIMES also observed no registration
took place.
“As you can see, there is nothing like that going on, maybe you could
get further clarification from the minister’s office,” one official
said on anonymity, fearing sanctions if he were identified.
Despite the apparent absence of the existence, a spokesperson for the minister, Oluyinka Akintunde, insisted the plan was afoot.
Mr. Akintunde denied the minister had misled the unemployed by
announcing a non-existent exercise, possibly as a passing political
remark. He said as part of the SURE-P, the programme was being
administered by a central presidential task team.
He also said the plan was targeted at the grassroots and the recruitment was meant to done on the basis of electoral Wards.
“There are provisions made for these things, and there are people
working on them,” Mr. Akintunde insisted. “The minister did not lie.”
Yet, he provided no verifiable detail about where the listings were
actually done, and no explanation was given as to why, if the
registration existed elsewhere, Ms. Akinjide had given a different
venue.
Again, there were no truly existed plans for the exercise elsewhere,
as PREMIUM TIMES found none ongoing within Abuja as the minister
claimed.
At one of the FCT units our reporters were referred to for
clarification, an official who spoke under anonymity said the so called
grassroots registrations had been completed since March, and 15,000-more
than the 10,000 required- were captured.
“We even had excess application,” the staff said.
Rosy initiative, fat budget, no delivery
At least 370,000 jobs are to be created under the SURE-P, with each
state and Abuja providing 10,000 in partnership with the federal
government.
A second component of the programme is tagged the Graduate Internship
Scheme, GIS, designed to enhance the employability of another 100,000
unemployed graduates across the federation. That will involve internship
placements with interested companies.
A new website has recently been dedicated for registration into the GIS.
But the 470,000 total slots, a potentially significant figure for an
ever-soaring unemployment rate, have barely taken off months even at the
state level, months after the SURE-P was created.
The programmer’s dismal performance, despite its huge multibillion budget, recently alarmed federal lawmakers.
At a budget meeting a fortnight ago, the National Assembly joint
committee on petroleum downstream, declared the programme a scam that
has failed to keep any of its promises of job creation, and accused
Christopher Kolade-led SURE-P committee of reckless spending.
The lawmakers accused the subsidy committee of duplicating projects
with ministries, and defrauding the nation by making double payments for
projects also financed by the ministries.
Most shocking, the committee found out how the committee claimed
spending N2.2 billion on “secretariat services” and another N75 million
on travels between July and October.
Another N27 billion was also spent on “Public Works for Youths”, and
N8.9bn for the purchase of 800 buses. Details of how the monies were
allocated were not provided to the lawmakers.
“The SURE-P funds should not be seen as crude oil money which
everybody is sharing,” Magnus Abe, the Chairman of the Senate Downstream
Petroleum Committee warned as the committee pressed for more
information.
For 2013, SURE-P is to spend N273.52 billion.
At a separate meeting, Mr. Kolade claimed the amount involved with
office administration was N1 billion and not N2.2 billion as earlier
stated. He knocked off criticisms trailing the committee’s failings by
declaring he will not quit.
“I will not quit, if you attack me, I will defend myself. The
National Assembly and the SURE-P Committee and everybody are supposed to
be working for Nigerians not individuals,” he was quoted as saying at a
media luncheon in Lagos.
Across the states, the confusion has played out, with barely any
state releasing provable data of how much of the 10,000 jobs have been
in the months that SURE-P existed.
PREMIUM TIMES’ attention was first drawn to Ms. Akinjide’s bogus job
announcement for Abuja, after early responders to her notice of
registration alerted that no such exercise was taking place at the
designated venue.
Reporters, who visited the secretariat and the FCT head office at Area 11 repeatedly, confirmed same to be true.
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