Empowerment

517 Vulnerable persons In FCT get succour as grants from FCT minister

Published

on

Some 517 vulnerable persons in FCT have benefitted from the second batch of FCT FADAMA CARES programme in continuation of official disbursement of grants by FCT Minister of State, Dr. Ramatu Tijjani Aliyu.

A statement by the Chief Information Officer (OHMS) Freda Aideyan quoted the minister to have emphasised that the event was another significant indicator of the unflinching determination of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration to take out 100 million Nigerians out of poverty.

According to her it is also aimed at improving livelihoods generally of the poor and vulnerable households in Nigeria in particular.

She recalled that in June this year the flag-off ceremony of the programme was performed in Kwali.
Aliyu reiterated the determination of the FCT Administration to continue to commit financial resources to ensure that poverty is reduced to the bearest level while improving the livelihoods of the poor and vulnerable agricultural households in the FCT.

‘’The specific objective of the FCT FADAMA CARES programme is to increase food security and ensure functional food supply chain in the FCT. 
“The programme is deliberately designed to support the recovery of livelihood activities of poor and vulnerable persons engaged in agricultural value chains with special consideration to women and unemployed youth. 
“Its implementation will be anchored on the World Bank community driven development approach for deployment of programme investments at the community level,” she stressed 

Aliyu further revealed that the FCT Administration has allocated the sum of $4.5 million to the FCT FADAMA CARES programme to implement three Disbursement Linked Indicators (DLIs) out of a total allocation of $15 million made available to the FCTA by the World Bank for implementation of the programme.

She, therefore, called on all the beneficiaries to make judicious use of the grants by supporting their farming activities which would facilitate their recovery from the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, thus improving livelihoods and contribute to the attainment of increased food security and safe functioning of food supply chain in the FCT.

Also speaking, the FCTA permanent secretary, Mr. Adesola Olusade, noted that the federal government and the FCT Administration have invested time and resources in the FADAMA CARES programme and it has started yielding tangible results. 
He said the positive results could be attested by the excellent result achieved by the FCT during the programme eligibility assessment exercise conducted by the World Bank where the FCT scored 88% which placed the FCT within the rank of the very best performing states in the country.
Olusade called on the FCT Agriculture and Rural Development Secretariat and other stakeholders to re-double their efforts towards ensuring the successful implementation of the programme in the FCT to enable the administration to reinvigorate households and small businesses in FCT ravaged by the devastating impact of Covid19 pandemic.
In his remarks, Secretary Agriculture and Rural Development Secretariat, Malam Abubakar Ibrahim, reiterated that this achievement is another significant milestone in the efforts of the FCT Administration towards supporting the attainment of food and nutritional security in the Federal Capital Territory.
According to him, “This official disbursement of grants to second batch of beneficiaries under FCT FADAMA CARES programme further affirms the unflinching commitment of the FCT Administration towards poverty reduction and improvement of livelihoods for poor and vulnerable agricultural households in the territory.”

The items to be distributed include fertilizers, seeds and agrochemicals, sprayers and personal protective equipment for crop farmers, day old chicks and feeds for poultry farmers, juveniles and feeds for fish farmers, goats for livestock farmers, grinding machines for women processors and motorized produce threshers for groups of unemployed youths.

Click to comment

Trending

Exit mobile version