No fewer than 174,000 N-power
volunteers in the Federal Government’s Social Intervention Programmes (SIPs)
have started receiving N30,000 monthly stipends.
There have been protests
nationwide by beneficiaries clamouring for arrears of their stipends.
On Tuesday, Afolabi Imokhuede,
Senior Special Assistant to the President on Job Creation, told State House
correspondents in Abuja, that “As we speak right now, about 86 per cent of them
really have been paid”.
“Now when I mean 86 per cent
after physical verification, as at last count in end of April we had about
174,000 qualified, verified volunteers out of 200,000.
“We are currently right now doing
a final reconciliation with all the states and FCT just to ensure, because we
also found out that there were few cases of computation error, a few cases of
omission at the point of digitizing the physical master list.
“The only ways we can know that;
or some states get to know, is when these volunteers call the helpline or send
e-mails complaining of non-payment.
“We then say to them; you cannot
be paid because our records show that you are absent from verification.’’
The Presidential aide said the
programme had been using focal persons, using N power coordinators in the
states to act as the go-between the government and the volunteers to crosscheck
their data.
He added that the complaints
about non-payment arose because some volunteers could not reconcile their
entries at the time of application with the information they presented during
the validation exercise.
Imokhuede said most invalid
verifications were caused by wrong Bank Verification Numbers (BVN) of the
volunteers which could not be linked to the accounts they had submitted.
He also said some women, who
applied with their maiden names but submitted their BVNs with their husband’s
surnames also had issues with the verification.
He said a lot of them also
applied in conformity with their certificates but a lot of such certificates
were not in tandem with their BVN data.
“All of those categories of
volunteers always come out invalid. What we did, which is important, is make
payments through the technology platform recognising that NIBS, (Nigerian
Interbank Settling System), is the custodian of all the BVN in Nigeria.
“We brought in NIBS as a key
stakeholder. What we do on monthly basis is to send the records to NIBS which
does the validation; and those who pass through the validation have no issues
and get their payments,’’ he added.
He said the verifications were to
protect the volunteers from fraud or being shortchanged by those who assisted
them in entering into the programme through corrupt cybercafés.
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