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Buhari Government To Spend N999million Daily On School Feeding Programme

The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, has authorised spending N100 per person daily on feeding in the programme.

President Muhammadu Buhari’s government has disclosed that it will spend N999 million daily to feed approximately 10 million pupils in the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme (NHGSFP) across the country.

This was revealed on Tuesday by Aishatu Digil, the team lead of NHGSFP at a stakeholders’ meeting on disbursement modalities for the review cost of feeding in the programme in Abuja.

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Ms Digil said Sadiya Umar Farouq, the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, has authorised spending N100 per person daily on feeding in the programme and that 9,990,862 pupils from primary one to three in the programme will now be fed with N100 daily for 20 days in a month, which would amount to N999,086,200 daily.

“Prior to this, we were feeding school children with N70 per child, per meal. This was since 2016, but the president has approved N100 upward review.

“The breakdown of the N100 is as follows; N70 is for the cost of all food items except egg, N14 for the cost of egg to be implemented through the state structures in partnership with Poultry Association of Nigeria.

“We are planning on having ‘Egg Wednesday’, where each child in the programme will be given one egg every Wednesday.

“N10 stipends for cooks, N5 and N6 for micronutrient fortification, payable to cooks and one naira for quality assurance, payable to supervisors, which is optional,” she told the News Agency of Nigeria.

Mrs Digil said the programme would eliminate poor implementation practices, adding that the ministry was looking out for reforms.

Meanwhile, Umar Bindir, the National Resource Person of the National Social Investment Programme, said that the programme was not the responsibility of the federal government alone.

Musa Abubakar, the programme manager of NHGSFP in Sokoto State, said pupils and their parents were happy with the initial N70 per meal per child.
 
Kingsley Anikwe from the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development suggested that the formation of school gardens should be encouraged in schools to handle the production of agricultural produce.

The programme is part of the N500 billion Social Investment Programme initiated by the Buhari’s government to tackle poverty and improve the health and education of children and other vulnerable groups.

Meanwhile, there have been allegations of massive corruption in the programme, allegations that the organisers have vehemently denied.

For instance, in May 2020, the National Parents Teachers Association, (NAPTAN) described the government’s decision to feed school children during the COVID-19 lockdown as creating avenues to enrich some people through corruption.