Tag: palliative

  • Second palliative distribution excites Coker-Aguda residents

    Second palliative distribution excites Coker-Aguda residents

    Residents of Coker-Aguda Local Council Development Area (LCDA) have hailed the Chairman, Razaq Ibrahim, for commencing the second phase of food packs distribution.

    They described the council boss’ action as timely.

    According to them, those who did not benefit from the first phase are excited to receive theirs.

    A beneficiary, Yusuf Sheriff, praised the chairman for touching many lives via the palliative packages.

    He commended him and prayed God to strengthen him more.

    Another beneficiary, Mrs. Rukayat Oyejide, thanked the council chief for his effort so far and encouraged him to keep showing up.

    Ibrahim, during the distribution, said it was part of the fulfillment of the promise made by the council to disburse palliative packages for six months.

    He said: “The joy on their faces makes me happy. That shows they are appreciative and we on the other hand need to ensure that we play our part to the community.

    “We are distributing food palliative to 2,000 beneficiaries and that is how it will go for the remaining months so we would have disbursed to 12,000 people.”

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    Ibrahim said the feedback from the people had motivated the council to do more.

    He further emphasised that there was no partial selection and everyone was selected irrespective of their political parties.

    “This is a general palliative from the local government to the community and this is how we do it so we can get to everyone in the community,” he said.

    The council boss assured that they were working with the councillors and the executive members and management to get more beneficiaries on board.

    “This is to ensure that we reach out to the number of people we are targeting,” he said.

    Ibrahim encouraged the people to stay calm, be prayerful and rest assured that the palliative packages would get to those who had not received yet.

    The Council Vice Chairman, who is the chairman, Palliative Committee, Olaleye Olanrewaju, said the beneficiaries were carefully selected.

  • Over 200 commercial motorcyclists receive fuel as palliative in Osun

    Over 200 commercial motorcyclists receive fuel as palliative in Osun

    No fewer than 200 commercial motorcyclists and tricyclists have benefited from fuel distribution palliative to mark the birthday celebration of the minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola.

    The distribution of the fuel which took place at two different petrol stations at Oke-Fia and Jaleyemi junction, Osogbo capital of Osun state was sponsored by the former commissioner for regional integration and special duties, Olalekan Badmus.

    Speaking while dispensing fuel to the beneficiaries, the chairman of Okada Riders in Osogbo, Comrade Najeem Bello extolled the gesture and urged well-meaning Nigerians to do more for the sector.

    Read Also: How not to administer palliatives

    He said: “The food that the government is distributing is not enough and this sector, we are neglected during the process, but this kind of initiative by Badmus will further help our business and encourage our members to work for the economy to grow.”

    In the remark, Badmus urged Nigerians to exercise patience with the government of President Bola Tinubu noting that reforms introduced by his government will yield long-term benefits for the country.

    His words: “For the main time before the reforms start yielding I have come to think of ideas of injecting the little that I have into the economy through the informal sector. Hence, I came up with this initiative of distributing fuel to over 200 commercial motorcyclists and tricyclists to mark the birthday celebrations of Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola.

    “Instead of throwing a big party celebration for him, let us channel the money to help the economy grow and make life easy for the people. My opinion is that party will not help our people this time but this kind of soothing gesture will go a long way to help the people and our economy.”

  • Rethinking palliative delivery

    Rethinking palliative delivery

    Can the Federal Government’s palliatives be managed more effectively? Transportation experts believe so, revealing their to-do list last week. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE reports

    During a recent Zoom webinar organised by the road sub-committee of the Chartered Institute of Transport Administration of Nigeria (CIOTA) to evaluate the distribution of palliatives in response to the removal of fuel subsidies, the verdict delivered was disheartening and alarming. It pointed towards potential failure. However, as the experts emphasised, a critical turnaround is essential if the Federal Government is genuinely committed to alleviating the burden on ordinary citizens who bear the brunt of this economic policy.

    Comprising individuals from academia, industry stakeholders, and seasoned economic experts, CIOTA, a consortium of transportation professionals, convened for a “Roundtable Discussion on Effective and Defective Palliative Delivery Strategies.” Their objective was to provide a practical blueprint that, if embraced, could significantly enhance the distribution of palliatives. Professor Samuel Odewumi, the former Dean of the School of Transport and Logistics at Lagos State University (LASU-SOT-L), and other participants at the webinar passionately advocated for more efficient and sustainable palliative delivery methods. Odewunmi, who also serves as the Chairman of the Road Transport Committee and organised the webinar, asserted that the optimal course of action for the Federal Government would involve subsidizing fertilizers for farmers, supplying crude oil to local refineries, and extending tax relief to manufacturers.

    Odewunmi, who intoned that insecurity is still a major menace said: “Everything possible should be done to ensure the security of lives and property in the land, a significant increase in crude production to shore up revenue which would strengthen the naira, expose and prosecute the oil thieves in order to put a stop to the larceny going on in the Niger Delta.”

    While speaking on the sub-topic, “Getting it Right: Effective and Sustainable Palliatives,” Odewunmi advocated payment of hardship allowance, sustainable salary increase for workers, payment of retirees’ pensions and arrears and all debt owed workers. He also advocated that the N5 billion given to each of the 36 state governors should be deployed to roll out gas conversion and dispensing infrastructure; and that the government should direct and assist petrol stations to be able to achieve triple simultaneous dispensing of fuel, gas and electricity.

    Odewunmi urged the government to carry out palliative work on the roads to make them passable for all, facilitate fuel distribution by the tankers and trailers and use trains to cheaply and securely move wet and solid cargoes to relieve the roads of excessive weight; and increase refined fuel supply. Admitting that the removal of the subsidy is laudable and inevitable, Odewunmi maintained that delaying the total withdrawal till now ends up making the pain more excruciating.

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    On the defects of the current palliative distribution, Odewunmi said allocating the same amount of N5 billion to all the states of the federation without any regard to their population size or peculiar demands/needs and circumstances is anything but a total lack of depth in thought. Callistus Ibe, a Professor of Transport Management at the Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO), Imo State, wondered why the government which pretended to know how to alleviate the suffering of the people could end up fish-feeding them rather than giving them the requisite skills on how to catch fish by themselves. Ibe, who is the Chairman of the Training Committee at CIOTA said like previous governments, the Tinubu administration, in handling palliative distribution, fell to the old gambit of throwing food to the poor to scramble leaving unresolved the fuel consumption and importation conundrum.

    Speaking on the topic “Offering the Politicians Suggestions on Palliative Delivery; the Productive Ways of Effective Palliative Delivery,” Prof. Ibe said whenever the transport sector sneezes; all other sectors catch a cold. According to him, the sneezing of the transport sector as a result of fuel subsidy removal has brought intense hardship on the people; leading to an increase in the cost of living and poverty. Prof. Ibe added that a productive way of distributing palliative ought to be by deliberate, focused, persistent, patriotic and sustainable government policies and not tokenism.

    On what he called proper ways of delivering palliatives, he talked about initiating greener mass transportation alternatives and productive distribution. He said: “The present act of distributing raw food items to the poor folks badly affected by the removal of fuel subsidy is, at best, a fire brigade approach, as it is neither focused nor persistent and cannot be sustained.” For him, such a step was a non-productive process that is based on consumerism rather than a productive approach that would have reduced the sufferings occasioned by the fuel subsidy removal.

    Ibe stated that the consumerism approach might have created a new set of billionaire businessmen and women overnight who buy off these food items in the market; thereby compounding the initial problems the policy is meant to address. For Ibe, the more effective and productive way of reducing the suffering of the people is to reduce the cost of transportation through mass transportation and alternative energy sources. “This productive approach would create jobs, open up employment and income will be earned. This single approach will have positive multiplier effects; it will be focused, persistent, patriotic and sustainable. The operators of the mass transit would be given guidelines to form business combines among themselves through co-operatives and vehicles would be allocated through the co-operatives and not individuals,” among other ways.

    While speaking on the NITT template of effective technological palliative, the Director-General/Chief Executive Officer of Nigerian Institute of Transport Technology (NITT) Zaria, Dr Bayero Salih Farah, began by taking participants through the regimes of fuel subsidy in Nigeria, said fuel subsidy became institutionalised in 1977, following the promulgation of the Price Control Act, which made it illegal for some products (including petrol) to be sold above the regulated price. He stated that while the concept of subsidy itself is noble, its administration in Nigeria has been plagued with severe challenges, which include the unsustainable financial cost of the subsidy, economic distortion, smuggling of fuel outside the country, endemic corruption and reduced investment in the downstream sector, among others.

    On what he called the NITT Initiative, Dr. Farah said “Saddled with the mandate to drive innovations through the development of new technologies to meet the demands of the transport and logistics industry, the Institute is researching and developing alternative fuel solutions for the transport industry. These initiatives include Bio-fuel from different sources for example, jatropha, hibiscus, organic wastes and sunflower; electric vehicles solutions with emphasis on renewable charging solutions, and autogas (both LPG and CNG) solutions through conversion of fossil fuel engines to autogas fuel engines or hybrid engines.”

    Farah also stated that the Institute is adopting a tactical technological transformation and migration to alternative fuel (autogas), especially for the transport and other economic sectors through the production of grassroots manpower to drive the migration and through the provision of enabling facilities, equipment and infrastructure to support the migration. Leveraging the mandates of the Institute and the emerging technology in autogas (LPN and CNG), according to him, the Institute initiates actions that could stimulate vehicle and other equipment conversion in a more formal and standardised way (best practice) across the country.

    He said the NITT aspires to provide a pool of qualified technicians for the conversion, repair and maintenance of CNG-powered vehicles; and provide centres across the country for vehicle conversion and training technicians; among others. He also reeled off the NITT vision on palliatives which include making vehicle conversion simple for everyone in the society, minimising the effects of fuel subsidy removal on the poor; promoting autogas as an alternative transportation fuel; providing economic opportunities by creating new jobs and growing a low carbon skills-based through innovation; and creating a flexible, smart and digitised autogas conversion system.

    The Executive Secretary of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), Dr Muda Yusuf wondered why the government would continue to distribute tokens to the people, when it could deploy the same funds to stimulate the economy, particularly the manufacturing sector; thereby ameliorating the pressure being brought to bear by subsidy removal. He challenged the Federal Government to go beyond the N100 billion loan proposed for the manufacturing sector to introduce tax reliefs and other such initiatives to encourage the productive sector to get back to work and remove the pressure on forex thereby improving the living condition of the average Nigerians who can be productively engaged rather than resorting to a monthly stipend from the government.

    Yusuf said no country avoids subsidising its economic growth and no government willingly subjects its economy totally to market forces the way we do in Nigeria, knowing that the capitalist economists exist only for the optimisation of profits. He said now that the Federal Government is making more money, there should be a careful and deliberate redistribution of these resources so that it reaches the nook and cranny of the country and touches the poor from whose pockets these monies are being made.

    “The government must ensure that they avoid the situation where new millionaires and billionaires are being made as a result of any of the initiatives aimed at ameliorating the suffering of the poor. The government must be deliberate in ensuring that they assuage the suffering and pains of the very poor which are making more money available for the government to spend,” he said.

    The Dean of the School of Transport and Logistics at LASU, Prof. Charles Asenime opined that because palliatives are temporary solutions that ameliorate the pains but do not solve the problem, deliberate attempts must be made to ensure that the palliatives achieve the intentions of the government who put them together. He said the current palliatives are a far cry from what could assuage the pains of the common folks, adding that transportation remains crucial if the government must achieve any success.

    The former Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Anthonia Ekpa noted that beyond the provision of mass transit vehicles, the government must work on rural roads, many of which she said are no longer in existence. Dr Ekpa, a former Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Transportation said the ministry carried out a road audit and would be in a better position to proffer solutions on how to go about achieving the best result in palliative intervention by the government.

    Participants at the webinar agreed that, as a partner in progress, CIOTA should make the communiqué at the end of the webinar available to the Secretary to the Government of the Federation as well as Secretaries of State Governments in all the 36 states of the federation and ensure they collaborate with the government for their implementation.

  • Subsidy: PWDs seek inclusion in Bauchi’s Palliative Committee

    Subsidy: PWDs seek inclusion in Bauchi’s Palliative Committee

    The Joint National Association of People with Disabilities (JONAPWD), Bauchi State Chapter has urged the state government to include its members in the Palliatives Distribution Committee for Petroleum Subsidy Removal.

     Chairman of the association, Mr Bulus Samaila, made the call yesterday in Bauchi during a  visit to the Deputy Governor, Mr Auwal Jatau, who is also the Chairman of the Palliative Distribution Committee.

    The News Agency Nigeria (NAN) reports that JONAPWD is the umbrella body for people with disabilities.

    Samaila said disabled people are usually left behind in the implementation of government policies and programmes, urging the committee to include its members.

    “We don’t want our share given to any agency or individuals, it should be given directly to our association to avoid us being shortchanged,” he said.

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    Samaila appealed to the government to constitute a board for the state agency of disabled persons in the  state.

    Jatau assured people with disabilities of inclusion in the Palliative Committee.

    He said the administration gave priority to people with disabilities.

    Jatau commended the association for its support for the administration of Governor Bala Muhammad, and urged them for more support so as to achieve excellence in leadership.

  • Abiodun flags off distribution of 300,000 rice palliatives

    Abiodun flags off distribution of 300,000 rice palliatives

    Ogun Governor Dapo Abiodun has flagged off the distribution of 300,000 bags of 10kg rice palliatives to residents.

    Abiodun said the symbolic ceremony on Friday evening was in line with his promise to ensure the immediate distribution of the palliatives.

    The Governor acknowledged the palliatives were sent to States by the Federal Government  land has been domesticated by the State Government. 

    “This is a Federal Government initiative under the leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu that is being domesticated right here in Ogun State.

    “Our desire in the first instance is to distribute about 300,000 bags of 10kg rice across our 5,400 polling units.

    “We have decided to use the polling units as a reference of distribution, not wards, because we realized that using wards won’t be equitable.

    “You can imagine taking a ward in Sagamu, for example, like the Ogijo ward and compare it with a ward in Ikenne. If we use the ward as the yardstick for distributing the palliatives, it is very unfair and not equitable.

    “But because we know that the Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC) has done a very detailed arrangement of our polling units to the point where all of us belong to a polling unit and that has allowed us to determine the number of people that are in our different wards.

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    “So you find out that a ward in Ogijo, for example, will have by far more polling units than a ward in Ikenne or Remo North. So we decided that we will use the polling units as a point of reference,” he said.

    Abiodun noted a committee made up of eminent men and women of distinguished character has been set up to oversee the distribution of the palliatives.

    He said the committee, chaired by his Deputy, would ensure the palliative distribution is effectively implemented while the 20 local governments will also have similar committees.

  • Chairman gives 500 GCE forms as palliative to indigent youths

    Chairman gives 500 GCE forms as palliative to indigent youths

    The Executive Chairman of Ifelodun Local Council Development Area (LCDA), Mayor Olufemi Okeowo, has said youths deserve palliatives and lifting from illiteracy and ignorance.

    Okeowo spoke during the presentation of 500 free General Certificate Examination (GCE) forms to youths, who cut across the seven wards of the Ifelodun LCDA.

    He said:”As a government and parents, we know the effects of the removal of fuel subsidy on strata of society, particularly our youths. We are also aware of the fact that many of you present here have sat for WAEC but could not make the necessary prerequisites for admission into higher institutions.

    “This is another golden opportunity we have provided through these free gifts to you. Some parents are going through financial difficulties, hence, the could not afford the cost of the forms. This is the reason we decided to shoulder this  challenge.Your parents can put the money into other uses.

    “This administration is ready to provide free JAMB forms to all those who made the required credits through these forms given to you. It is the tax payers’ money. Read well and pass, so that the gesture could be justified.”

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     Head, Department of Education, Mrs. Funmilayo Abraham, said the recipients were selected from the over  2,000 applicants who applied,  and almost all the recipients were residents of Ifelodun LCDA

    A recipient, Oluwadare Bulala, thanked the chairman for the largess at this time when many parents and youths could not afford the prohibitive cost of the form. He said the recipients would not disappoint the local government.

     Present at the occasion were the Vice Chairman, Alhaja Adetoun Ojora-Adejiyan; Secretary to the Local Government Hon. Hassan Olanrewaju, members of the executive committee, Council Manager Mr. Azeez Saheed Abiodun, party leaders, members of the Community Development Associations, youth leaders, market leaders and others.

  • Residents loot Bayelsa palliative warehouse 

    Residents loot Bayelsa palliative warehouse 

    • Ex-agitators vow to shut down Niger Delta over governors’ silence
    • Osun beef up security  around stores

    Aggrieved Bayelsa State residents yesterday broke into a warehouse on Isaac Boro Expressway, Yenagoa, and carted away palliatives kept by the state government.

    It was gathered that the burglars, groaning under the hardship occasioned by the removal of fuel subsidy, took food items, particularly rice meant for victims of last year’s flood, were kept.

    Bayelsa was described as one of the worst hit states in the country’s history.

    Some of the food items carted away by the looters, it was gathered, had since expired but that did not stop them.

    With the subsidy removal ramping up the price of petrol from around N190 to about N620 per litre in the state, prices of goods and services had correspondingly skyrocketed resulting in acute hardship for many households across the state.

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    President Bola Tinubu had promised some palliatives for Nigerians to cushion the effects of the removal as the administration announced N5 billion grants and foodstuffs for each state and the Federal Capital Territory, FCT.

    However, it has yet to be ascertained if the warehouse looted in Yenagoa housed food items promised by the Tinubu administration.

    The state government has yet to comment on the incident.

    A resident of Yenagoa metropolis said the information he got was that the looted palliatives were not new, stressing that they were left-overs from the flood period.

    A source, who craved anonymity, said: “Many of the food items were bad, except perhaps the water. Yesterday, they were cleaning the place to pave the way for new palliatives to be bought in. But some people acting on erroneous information invaded the place and started looting the food items meant to be thrown away.

    “For me, the only query is why the state government should leave the food items to get spoilt when they should have given them out to the people at the right time?”

    Meanwhile, aggrieved ex-agitators have threatened to stage protests in the Niger Delta following failure of governors in the region to provide palliatives to poor communities despite receiving N5bn from the Federal Government.

    The angry stakeholders under the auspices of Coalition of Ex-agitators of Niger Delta (CEND) said their governors seemed to have diverted the money released by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to alleviate the suffering caused by the removal of fuel subsidy.

    The Chairman, CEND, Gen. Gershom Mpakaboari Gbobo, said in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, that while Tinubu was sensitive enough to make provisions for palliatives, their governors appeared unconcerned with the level of hardship in their various states, especially in Bayalsa and Rivers states.

    “Where are our palliatives?” queried Gershom, who insisted that there were no deliberate activities and programmes by the governors targeted at providing relief to the people.

    He said: “Does it mean that as usual, these governors have pocketed the money? We will never allow it to happen. We will compel them to bring out the money in a mother of all protests across the states. It will no longer be business as usual. Our people are suffering untold hardship while these governors are junketing in profligacy and living large without showing any concern to our problems.

    “We expected the governor’s to have started deliberate programmes aimed at reaching the people with palliatives. We expected them to add reasonable amount of money to the N5bn and float far-reaching programmes that will practically ameliorate the pains of the people. But they are less concerned. We can see what Borno Governor is doing for his people but our entire region is quiet.”

    Gershom wondered why some leaders of ex-agitators like the Chairman of the Presidential Amnesty Programme Committee on Strategic Communications, Gen. Nature Dumale, and the Chairman/President of all first Phase Ex-Agitators in the Niger Delta region, HRH Henry Binidodogha Ekes, had remained quiet over the non-challant attitude of the governors.

    “Are our leaders, the likes of Hon Kakas, the leaders of Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), who is very close to the Presidency, including Nature Dumale, who is also the Secretary of the First Phase Ex-agitators part of the conspiracy to divert the palliative cash? All of them must speak out against these governors because when we begin our protests we will not listen to anybody,” Gershom said.

    In Osun State, the government said it has beefed up security around warehouses where subsidy removal palliatives of Federal government were kept to prevent looting and invasion by hoodlums.

    The state had announced receipt of 3,000 bags of rice from the federal government and said it was awaiting 14,516 bags of rice and 3200MT of maize before it would commence distribution of palliative to the vulnerable.

    The Commissioner for Information and Public Enlightenment, Kolapo Alimi, told our correspondent that government has put in place additional security operatives around the warehouses where palliative are kept.

    His words: “We have put enough security measures in place, for those that may want to take advantage of the fact that we are still expecting another consignment from the federal government to loot the one we have at hand. We have informed security operatives and we have built more security around the places (warehouses) to make it impossible for anybody to loot the palliative meant for the vulnerable of the society.

    “We are still updating the people of the state tomorrow on development over the palliative because we heard information that some consignment will arrive today (Monday). So, when we receive it, we are going to update the people on what is going on.”

  • Palliative: Ogun receives FG’s 3,000 bags of rice

    Palliative: Ogun receives FG’s 3,000 bags of rice

    • Targets aged women, others as beneficiaries

    Ogun State Government has received a consignment of the first 3,000 bags of rice donations from the Federal Government in fulfillment of its plan to distribute grains to Nigerians to mitigate the effect of the fuel subsidy removal.

    The Secretary to the Government of Ogun State, Mr. Olatokunbo Talabi, who confirmed this on Friday while fielding questions from newsmen, said distribution would commence after the repackaging of the grains of the commodities is concluded.

    Talabi also affirmed that the state government had received money from the Federal Government for the procurement of grains, part of the money planned for the procurements to be distributed to residents by each state.

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    The SSG noted that the state government is procuring more grains to complement the ones given by the FG for a wider reach among the residents.

    He said: “Special considerations will be given to the elderly, physically challenged persons, and women, among others, in the distribution of the commodities.”

    He added that the state government had already set up a committee of highly credible persons to be involved in the distribution of the palliatives.

  • IPAC to Adeleke: don’t play politics with Fed Govt’s palliative

    IPAC to Adeleke: don’t play politics with Fed Govt’s palliative

    Following the withholding of 3,000 bags of rice from the Federal Government, Inter Party Advisory Council (IPAC) in Osun State has urged Governor Ademola Adeleke not to play politics with the distribution of palliatives to the people.  

    IPAC through the Chairman, Wale Adebayo, in a statement yesterday in Osogbo, berated the state government for continual delay of the distribution of the 3,000 bags of rice received from the Federal Government. 

    He said Adeleke was voted into office by the people to address their welfare. 

    IPAC said: “We beseech Adeleke not to play politics with the distribution of Federal Government’s palliatives to the state. The state government has been rather slow in announcing its own palliatives to the state. The plight of the less privileged and the vulnerable shouldn’t be compounded by this unnecessary delay in the distribution of the items from Abuja. 

    “What the Federal Government has done is commendable, as it is making efforts to reduce hunger and hardship experienced by Nigerians as a result of fuel subsidy removal. We want our state too to do more, as the good people of Osun State have so much trust in them to deliver. 

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    “Much still needs to be done by Governor Adeleke’s administration to cushion the effect of fuel subsidy removal like our neighbouring states. Huge resources have been made available to him due to increased revenue from the Federal Government allocation. The least we want from him is to avoid playing politics with the welfare of the people.” 

    Adebayo said Osun is perhaps the only state with no clear modalities for civil servants, artisans and the masses.

    “Neighbouring states have been dishing out top notch programmes to cushion the effect of removal of petrol subsidy.” 

  • Subsidy removal: Nasarawa govt flags off distribution of palliative to citizens

    Subsidy removal: Nasarawa govt flags off distribution of palliative to citizens

    Nasarawa state governor, Abdullahi Sule, has flagged off the distribution of food items as palliative to the people of the state.

    The palliative was aimed at cushioning the hardship being experienced by Nigerians as a result of the removal of fuel subsidy by President Bola Tinubu.

    The state governor, Abdullahi Sule, commenced the distribution of the food items comprising rice, vegetable oil, maggi and noodles, provided by both the federal and state governments.

    The  ceremony took place on Tuesday, August 22, at the palace of the Emir of Lafia. 

    The governor said that the exercise, which would be replicated in Akwanga and Keffi on respectively, was meant to bring succour to the people especially with the hardship being experienced across the country following the removal of fuel subsidy. 

    He said the palaces have been selected for the distribution because the pallatiative is meant for all citizens of the state, irrespective of political affiliation.

    Governor Sule said: “The essence of the event has been defined clearly to everybody to understand that this is just a flag off. This is just the start. What we are trying to do here, by the grace of God, we will replicate, and it will happen in every unit of Nasarawa State.   

    “Tomorrow, we are going to have a similar flag off at the palace of our father, the Chun Mada in Akwanga.  And then, we will have another flag off that is going to take place in Keffi, at the palace of the Emir of Keffi.”

    The governor further explained that, to ensure that the food items reach the desired destination, his administration has engaged all the various religious bodies, royal fathers, members of Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), community members, youths and women groups, as well as officials of government in the sharing arrangement.

    Read Also: Ondo to begin distribution of palliatives Sept 1

    He disclosed that, aside the food items, his administration has made plans to take care of civil servants in the state.

    In a remarks, the state commissioner, ministry of special duties for humanitarian services and NGOs, Margaret Elayo, called on those charged with the responsibility of sharing the palliative to discharge their responsibility with sincerity and the fear of God.

    In their welcome addresses, both the Executive Chairman of Lafia Local Government Area, Hon. Aminu Muazu Maifata and the Emir of Lafia, HRH Justice Sidi Bage Muhammad (rtd), appreciated the Governor for bringing succour to the people.