THE Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Lagos and Ogun states have received 279 trucks of grains, Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development Sadiya Farouq has said.
President Muhammadu Buhari had approved the release of 70,000 metric tonnes of grains for distribution to the poor and vulnerable to cushion the impact of the lockdown order in affected states.
She said she was yet to get the 70,000 metric tonnes approved by President because of the storage challenge.
Mrs. Farouq said: “70,000 grains were approved by Mr. President that it should be given to the PTF through the ministry and to be distributed to the three affected lockdown states by the federal government and then to other frontline states.
“So far, we have deployed 279 trucks of grains to the three affected states locked down by the federal government and we are making plans for the next deployment to other frontline states.
“We have not taken all the 70,000 metric tonnes of grains. So, we still have some grains in the silos because metric tonnes are quite a huge number. 2000 metric tonnes alone will require nothing less than 80 trucks to deploy, so it is quite a huge number and there is nowhere we can put these grains. We have to leave them in the silos and be deployed as the need arises.”
“The community leaders, leaders of faith-based organisations, youth leaders, women leaders, and others are involved in drawing up the list of the poor and vulnerable households in that community.
“The groups submit a list individually and if you go through the list and discover that a name that is not on a particular group’s list is on other people’s list, it disqualifies such a person. So, it is almost impossible for the same members of a household to get this intervention but we will go back and investigate very well.”
The minister added that the food relief distributed to some beneficiaries would last them for two months.
“The Federal Government’s palliative is for a minimum of two months for the food relief and the cash transfer. I think we have been able to adequately cater for these vulnerable groups by giving them the two months package
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