
The Federal Government will create
no fewer than one million direct jobs in 2016, the Vice President, Prof. Yemi
Osinbajo, has said A statement issued by Laolu Akande, his Senior Special
Assistant (SSA) on Media and Publicity, quoted Osinbajo as saying that another
one million poor Nigerians would benefit from the first phase of the
Conditional Cash Transfer Scheme.
The statement, released to newsmen
on Thursday in Abuja, said that theVP made the remark during an interactive
session with a cross section of Nigerian Community in Burkina
Faso. Osinbajo was Burkina Faso to represent President Muhammadu Buhari at
the inauguration of the newly elected president of that country Roch Marc
Christian Kabore.
He said the homegrown school feeding
programme would not only provide adequate nutrition to school children, but
would also boost agriculture, create jobs and wealth locally. Osinbajo
assured the Nigerian community that the fight against corruption was a
continuous one. He said that the Buhari administration would not only prosecute
those involved but also recover all the loot that had been traced.
“We will go after Nigeria’s fund
wherever it is found and we will recover it,’’ he said, saying “our country is
bound for greatness.’’ The Vice President told the Nigerian community that
President Buhari was a man to be trusted; a man of integrity. “I am proud
of our leadership and this is a great opportunity for the country to be
great,’’ he added.
In his remarks, Nigeria’s Ambassador
to Burkina Faso, David Bala, described the one million Nigerians resident in
the country as `peaceful and law abiding.’ people. Michael Adeyanju, the
leader of the Nigerian Community in Burkina Faso, thanked the federal
government for attending the inauguration of the Burkinabe President.
He described the gesture as a sign
of cordial relationship between both countries. He said Nigeria was the
only country that donated 20 Hilux vans to assist the country’s electoral
commission, adding that the gesture raised the pride of the Nigerian community
.
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