The
President, Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, has said that more than 100 million
out of the country’s estimated population of 187 million are wallowing in
poverty.
Alhaji Aliko Dangote |
He told
participants at the Executive Course No. 38, 2016 of the National Institute for
Policy and Strategic Studies, Kuru, near Jos, Plateau State, that the situation
was unacceptable to him given Nigeria’s abundant resources, according to a
statement made available on Sunday.
Delivering
a paper entitled: ‘Promotion of local manufacturing and poverty reduction in
Nigeria: The private sector experience and policy options’, he said, “It is a
curious paradox that Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, and the largest
economy on the continent, also has one of the highest levels of poverty.
“It is estimated that more than 100 million
out of a population of 187 million Nigerians live below the poverty line.”
Quoting a
United Nations report, Dangote said youth unemployment had risen to 42 per cent
this year, with many graduates roaming the streets of major cities such as
Lagos, Kano, Abuja and Port Harcourt in search of elusive white-collar jobs,
while for some who were employed, their situation could best be described as under-employment,
as they were being under utilised and poorly paid.
This
development, according to him, has serious security implications, as evidenced
by the high rate of social ills plaguing the nation.
“The spate of kidnappings, intermittent
vandalism of petroleum pipelines in the Niger Delta, and the protracted
insurgency in the North-East are all fuelled, to a large extent, by the high
level of endemic poverty in the country,” he stated.
Dangote
pointed out that the current economic recession had further worsened the
situation, as the government continued to record dwindling revenues, thus
making it increasingly difficult for it to fulfil some of its obligations to
the people.
He said,
“Coupled with this, the activities of insurgents in the North-East have also
affected the level of poverty in that part of the country. It is estimated that
there are over 2.4 million Internally Displaced Persons in the region. It will
take billions of naira to rebuild the North-East and fully re-settle the
victims of the insurgency.”
* Source: Critical News Times
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