The Federal Government says it has expended about N523.3 million on school feeding programme during the lockdown against the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development (MHADMSD), Sadiya Farouq, announced this at the Presidential Taskforce briefing on COVID-19 in Abuja.
According to her, the programme was modified and implemented in three states following a March 29th, Presidential directive.
She said:
It is critical at this juncture to provide details that will help puncture the tissue of lies being peddled in the public space.
The provision of ‘Take Home Rations’, under the modified Home Grown School Feeding programme, was not a sole initiative of the MHADMSD.
The ministry, in obeying the Presidential directive, went into consultations with state governments through the state Governor’s Forum, following which it was resolved that ‘take-home rations’, remained the most viable option for feeding children during the lockdown.
So, it was a joint resolution of the ministry and the state governments to give out take-home rations.
The stakeholders also resolved that we would start with the FCT, Lagos and Ogun states, as pilot cases.
The Minister said that each takes home ration was valued at N4,200 and that the figure was arrived at with proper consultation.
Farouq further stated that the figure generated from statistics provided by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the Central bank of Nigeria (CBN).
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She stated:
According to statistics from the NBS and CBN, a typical household in Nigeria has 5.6 to six members in its household, with three to four dependent.
So, each household is assumed to have three children.
Based on the original design of the Home Grown School Feeding programme, long before it was domiciled in the ministry, every child on the programme receives a meal a day.
The meal costs N70 per child.
When you take 20 school days per month, it means a child eats food worth N1,400 per month.
Three children would then eat food worth N4,200 per month and that was how we arrived at the cost of the ‘take-home ration’.
“The agreement was that the federal government will provide the funding while the states will implement.
“To ensure transparency in the process, we partnered with the World Food Programme (WFP) as technical partners.”
She said that her ministry invited government agencies like the EFCC, CCB, ICPC, DSS and some NGOs to monitor the process.