Atiku: Ex-VP calls for conducive ground for job creation
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has advised governments at all levels to create the enabling environment that would attract and sustain investments that would create jobs for the army of unemployed in Nigeria.
A
statement by Atiku Media Organization on Sunday in Abuja reported
Abubakar as making the recommendation to mark the United Nations
International Migrants Day holding on Monday.
He
said that creation of jobs and opportunities with inclusive government
that did not engender crisis would help to stem the ill-fated migration
of Nigerians.
Abubakar said that the
major driver of migration, which at times were ill fated like in the
case of Libya, was the search of a better life and opportunity.
He
said that the current situation in the country where three million
jobs, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, had been lost
annually in the last two years, had rendered millions jobless.
He added that no prospects of opportunities were compelled to take the suicidal flight.
“The
chances of a young person with a job and opportunity at home taking a
suicidal flight in search of a better life will become an exception and
not the rule”, he said.
He also attributed the cause of migration to poverty and insecurity in the original countries of the migrants.
Abubakar
noted that it was imperative for governments in Africa, Nigeria
inclusive, to govern in such a way as to create an environment conducive
for economic progress and employment generation.
He added that a fair and inclusive government would spread available opportunities to all citizens.
This,
according to him, will also encourage those with entrepreneurial
inclination to start businesses and factories to absorb the teeming
population of the unemployed, thus making unbridled migration
unnecessary.
The former Vice President
stated that citizens did not choose to be migrants but unpleasant
social, economic and political conditions in many countries forced them
into migrants, seeking new homes, security, employment and a better
future.
He opined that all hands needed
to be on deck to deal squarely, and in a humane manner, with the
challenges thrown up by the reality of migration in the contemporary
World.
He said that one of the worst
forms of maltreatment, which a migrant could experience, was the large
scale enslavement of young and helpless Nigerian and African migrants in
Libya which recently drew global attention.
“To
prevent the recurrence of unbridled migration as we have today among
Nigerian youths, the authorities at federal and state levels should
endeavor to discourage potential migrants.
“This should be done through public enlightenment and information about the down sides of poorly conceived overseas travels.”
He urged the international community to ensure that the international code of treatment of migrants was strictly adhered to.
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