Nigeria’s Pre-Protest Job Offers and Cash Grants Aim to Prevent Nationwide Demonstrations
In the days leading up to a nationwide protest against poor governance and high living costs, Nigeria is attempting to dissuade its youth from participating by offering jobs in the state oil company and distributing billions of naira in grants among other incentives.
Inspired by youth-led protests in other African nations like Kenya and Uganda, Nigerian activists are aiming to spark similar movements that have challenged governments and faced strong security measures.
For the first time in nearly ten years, Nigeria’s state oil company, which previously cautioned job seekers against falling for fraudulent job offers, posted nationwide job vacancies on X.
A spokesperson from NNPC Ltd mentioned that the surge in applications caused the companyโs website to crash.
On Friday, Nigeria’s youth development ministry also reintroduced a 110 billion naira ($70 million) youth investment fund, originally launched in 2020, designed to provide grants for job creation among the youth.
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Although the youth ministry announced in May that the program would be revived, no updates had been provided until Friday.
On Tuesday, Nigerian lawmakers approved a new minimum wage, significantly increasing the monthly earnings for the lowest-paid workers.
Nigerians are mobilizing online for nationwide protests next week in reaction to a cost-of-living crisis marked by a 28-year-high inflation rate of 34.2%, following President Bola Tinubuโs removal of fuel subsidies and currency devaluation.
Various Nigerian leaders, including religious clerics and traditional rulers, are joining the government in urging young people to refrain from protesting on August 1, fearing that protests similar to those in Kenya could devastate the economy.
The government has requested more time to alleviate the hardships, with police and army leaders warning that the protests might spiral out of control.
Protesters insist on their right to peaceful demonstrations, accusing the government of using warnings of potential violence as a pretext for a crackdown.
Nigeria’s Pre-Protest Job Offers and Cash Grants Aim to Prevent Nationwide Demonstrations