Some
beneficiaries of the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP), have urged Niger
Delta ex-agitators and youths to support President Muhammadu Buhari’s
programmes
and policies for the region, saying the president meant well. The
ex-agitators, who spoke with newsmen on Thursday in Abuja, said they would
remain grateful to Buhari’s administration for empowering them in various
skills.
Mr Reuben
Wilson, an ex-militant leader, said that PAP, under the leadership of Brig-Gen.
Paul Boroh had engaged ex-agitators in various empowerment programmes and had
also facilitated employment for some of them who graduated recently. According
to Wilson, PAP has also assisted in rehabilitating more than 200 persons from
his camp who have all shunned violence and embraced peace.
He commended the
Federal Government for initiating the programme which he said had empowered
many youths in the region and scaled down crime rate. Mr Jerry Fiberesima, a
native of Okrika, Rivers State, said the programme helped him become a better
man after living a life of violence. Fiberesima said he is now a successful
farmer with 28 persons from his community working under him and earning a
living. “I now have a farm where I plant corn, plantain and other vegetables;
and which is being managed by my 28 employees.” He urged those yet to be
empowered to exercise patience as it would be their turn.
Mr Emmanuel
Onoyo-Akorhe, a fish farmer in Delta, said PAP had given them the opportunity
to boost their fishing business and created a ladder out of poverty and food
insecurity for the region. Mr Reuben Opuobori, who also owns a fish farm, said
that the vocation had offered him and other ex-agitators a chance to make a
difference by growing enough food to feed the nation. Opuobori said though
there were many challenges, young people should be trained and encouraged to
live on their own and contribute to making Nigeria self sufficient and peaceful.
“As we look to find solutions to feeding a world of nine billion people by
2050; it is this new generation that will work together to achieve that set
goal,’’ he said. Uche Ogburia, from Elele, Rivers state, said poultry farming
had become very lucrative due to the high demand for the products. “Little
investment is required to start up the business and losses are minimal,”
Ogburia said.
He also encouraged those with the challenge of acquiring land for
the business to consider family land as an option, so that gradually they would
be able to acquire theirs when the business becomes lucrative.
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