Piqued by the enslavement and other harrowing misfortune being experienced by Nigerian Youths migrating to Europe and other African countries to eke out a living, the Industrial Training Fund (ITF) has appealed to stakeholders in Nigeria to collaborate with ITF to equip more youths with skills for employability and entrepreneurship saying this approach will stem the rising migration.
Director-General ITF, Sir Joseph Ari who stated this when some stakeholders of the Fund visited him at the headquarters of the organization in Jos, Plateau State said equipping Nigerians with relevant skills was not only in line with the Federal Government’s efforts to create jobs but would stem the current wave of migration, especially by the youth which has culminated to loss of lives and enslavement of thousands of productive Nigerians.
He wondered why the mass migration despite the fact that several surveys by the ITF and other organizations have revealed that skills gaps exist that were being filled by foreigners adding that it was with a view to equipping Nigerians with skills to fill these existing vacancies that the ITF has embarked on a number of initiatives and expanded existing programmes to ensure that more Nigerians are empowered with skills to check unemployment and promote entrepreneurship.
“Some of the programmes including, the National Industrial Skills Development Programme (NISDP), Passion to Profession, Training on Wheels Using Mobile Training Units, the Women Skills Empowerment Programme (WOSEP), the Technical Skills Development Project (TSDP) as well as the Vulnerable and Indigent Youth Empowerment Programme (VIYEP)amongst several others”.
The Director General who said ITF through NISDP has trained over 100,000 Nigerians since inception added that under the current phase that is ongoing in the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), the ITF is training 11,100 trainees with skills in Welding and Fabrication, Tailoring and Garment Making, and Plumbing and Pipe Fitting.
According to him, in the last one year alone, over 70,000 Nigerians benefited from these skills acquisition programmes, adding that all the beneficiaries were given starter packs to start their businesses.
He said: “About 90 percent of the beneficiaries were either currently successful entrepreneurs or earning livelihoods as paid employees according to the monitoring and evaluation of graduates conducted by the ITF”.
Sir, Ari added that some of the programmes were carried out in collaboration with several Organisations and Agencies both Private and Public in order to check unemployment and promote entrepreneurship.
He said the State Governments, for instance, could collaborate with the ITF towards the establishment of Industrial Skill Training Centres (ISTCs), which will be managed by the ITF on their behalf, noting that expanding access to skills acquisition that would create jobs will discourage Nigerian youths from seeking greener pastures outside the shores of the country
The DG warned that if drastic action was not taken, the problem would further escalate going by projections that by 2050, Nigeria’s population will soar over 500 million, stressing however that if equipped with the requisite skills, the population could become hugely advantageous.
In his remarks, Mr. Danjuma Gyang, a representative of the stakeholders, commended the ITF on its initiatives, noting that they will positively reverse the unemployment situation by directly creating jobs.
Gyang urged Stakeholders to collaborate with the ITF in order for the Organization to expand its programmes to accommodate more Nigerians willing to acquire skills.