The Muhammadu Buhari-led administration has commenced direct payment of
N65,000 monthly stipends to former militants in the Niger Delta, with
the payment of the three months arrears owed them.
Launching the direct payment exercise in Port Harcourt, the Rivers Stare
capital, the the chief of staff in the Office of the Special Adviser to
the President on Niger Delta Affairs and Coordinator of the
Presidential Amnesty Programme, Col. Dedis Abel (rtd), said Government
will no longer make such payment through leaders of the ex-militants.
Abel said, “The Amnesty Office took the decision to pay the ex-agitators
directly following reports of complicity and short-changing of some of
them by the leaders. Reports revealed that some of the ex-agitators were
paid as low as N20,000 out of the N65,000 which does not conform with
the mandate of the Presidential Amnesty Programme.
“Henceforth, payment of the monthly stipend would be made directly to
each beneficiary with focus to eliminate cases of fraud and
short-changing by their leaders. Similarly, this exercise will enable us
to collect biometrics of beneficiaries and to create Bank Verification
Numbers to enable government to make future payments through their
individual bank accounts.”
He stated that the week-long direct payment was to off-set the October,
November and December arrears owed to more than 2,000 former agitators,
drawn from several ex-agitators’ camps in the state and environ, adding
that out of the 30,000 beneficiaries under the Amnesty Programme, only
13,000 had received either formal education or vocational training
before the present team came onboard.
The chief of staff said, “However, the number of those trained increased
by 5,000 since Retired Brig.-Gen. Paul Boroh was appointed by President
Muhammadu Buhari to head the Presidential Amnesty Programme five months
ago. The 5,000 newly trained beneficiaries were sent to both local and
foreign institutions and vocational centres to acquire knowledge and
skills that would allow them become self-reliant.”
Abel, who disclosed that the remaining 12,000 ex-agitators yet to
participate in the process would be trained in the coming months,
commended Heritage Bank for its partnership in the Amnesty Programme.
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