Betta Edu, the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, has stated that the NPower payment list contains names of people who should not be on the programme.
Edu made the disclosure during a conversation with Arise TV about recent advances in her ministry, saying that several problems with the NPower initiative had been identified and that the ministry was working to resolve them.
She said, “First of all, when we came onboard, we found lots of issues with the NPower programme that made us re-engage the entire plan. One of the things was that there were people registered on the NPower beyond the envelope that was provided for the programme.
“Secondly, funds were released for payment for people under NPower, and they were not paid in a timely manner by the managers of the funds of the NPower beneficiaries.
“There were also people who were on the payment list who are not supposed to be there, and there are persons who are there but are not providing any services but have been enrolled to have payment.
“And there are people whose time with the NPower had elapsed since a year ago, but they still believe they should continue to get payment, so they called it the exit plan, the exit payment, and so on.
“So the first thing we did was set up a committee to look at these issues, which has the secretary of the ministry as the head, and we have received our first report.”
The minister also stated that Tinubu’s administration is committed to lifting 133 million Nigerians out of poverty by 2030 in accordance with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals and that at least 20 million Nigerians will be out of poverty by next year.
“For poverty alleviation, we are targeting at least 133 million Nigerians between now and 2030, which is in line with the SDGs that we signed at the United Nations.
“But beyond showing commitment to the UN, the president is very committed and concerned about the plight of Nigerians and about pulling them out of poverty. The difference here is that we are not going to continue doing things the same way and expect different results.
“There are different plans we are working on, and we believe very strongly that by the next year, we should be able to say that at least we have removed 20 million Nigerians out of poverty,” she said.