Osinbajo receives report on SRIP
Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo receives progress report on Special Relief Intervention Plan (SRIP) alongside National Assembly lawmakers from North-East at the presidential villa in Aso Rock.
There seem to be a considerable progress in the implementation of the Special Relief Intervention initiative that was launched in Maiduguri by the Federal Government on June 8 to deliver effective and comprehensive humanitarian aid especially food to persons displaced by the Boko Haram insurgency in the North-East.
The initiative which is part of a broad plan to address food shortage in the camps and other settlements of displaced persons, is now delivering assorted grains to internally displaced (through over 1000 trucks) and already have reached 12, 691 households in Borno state since the flag off by the Acting President on June 8.
According to the update presented by the implementation team, the issue of diversion of relief materials including food and related matters which has dogged food delivery to the IDPs would be significantly curbed under the new distribution matrix adopted under the initiative.
Having listened to a presentation from the team overseeing the Special Relief Intervention, at the Presidential Villa in the company of National Assembly members from the northeast, the Acting President described the initiative as “a unique operation that promises to deliver on a well laid out plan, assuring all that the process would remain transparent and the objectives fully actualized’’.
He added that aside the emergency food distribution, “Government will deliver on a wholistic plan that includes empowerment because empowerment is an important feature of the relief intervention.’’
The Acting President said though “the problems are immense and huge, especially when the enormity of the problem is compared to available resources,’’ the Federal Government remains determined to deliver humanitarian aid through a process that is transparent and effective.
Osinbajo solicited the support of the National Assembly especially from members representing the region, to enable government realise its objective of maintaining an effective humanitarian service delivery, led by the Nigerian government.
In his own words; “we must support this team because a lot of attention is focused on us especially including from the international community."
“We need to be responsible and do this efficiently, and monitor performance on a regular basis. It is a good opportunity to prove that we can handle these efforts very well,’’ Prof. Osinbajo added.
A total of 656 armed police personnel would be involved in the movement of assorted grains from various reserves across the country to designated NEMA warehouses in the North-East for onward distribution to beneficiaries.
Another 1,376 military personnel would escort the grains to some IDPs in the hinterlands across the affected states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe.
However, lawmakers present at the meeting made observations about the mode of intervention and the kind of aid provided to the IDPs.
Some of the lawmakers called for the integration of empowerment and provision of agricultural inputs as part of aid provided to the IDPs, under the present phase of the Federal Government intervention.
The new distribution matrix would entail moving grains from the reserves to the NEMA warehouses for onward distribution to camp stores and to the beneficiaries’ door posts.