133 million Nigerians Still Wallow In Poverty — Tinubu’s Aide

Posted by Amarachi on Tue 02nd Jul, 2024 - tori.ng

Adefulire made the statement during an advocacy and sensitization campaign in Kano and Ondo states on Monday, July 1, noting that the global community was way behind in achieving the SDGs.

The Senior Special Assistant to President Tinubu on Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs, Princess Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, has stated that sixty-three per cent of Nigerians, or 113 million Nigerians are multi-dimensionally poor.

Adefulire made the statement during an advocacy and sensitization campaign in Kano and Ondo states on Monday, July 1, noting that the global community was way behind in achieving the SDGs.

Adefulire’s statement comes after the Multidimensional Poverty Index Report (2022) and the National Bureau of Statistics’ Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey Report (2022) revealed significant leves of poverty across states and geopolitical zones, with the north having a higher poverty rate than the south.

Adefulire said: “The global community is lagging behind in efforts to attain the Sustainable Development Goals, and Nigeria is facing various challenges.

”Therefore, it’s imperative for all stakeholders, particularly state and local governments, to accelerate progress.

“Nigeria is committed to achieving the SDGs, but we’re faced with issues such as Triple C Crisis – COVID, Climate Change, and Conflicts, which have put implementation off-track globally. Only 15% of SDGs targets are on track as of 2023.

“In Nigeria, 63% or 133 million people are still multi-dimensionally poor, with poverty levels varying significantly across states and geopolitical zones. Multidimensional poverty is higher in rural areas, and 65% of poor people live in the north, while 35% live in the south.

“The Federal Government has demonstrated strong commitment to implementing the SDGs, and we need sub-national governments to match these efforts. Institutional frameworks have been established to guarantee effective implementation, but we require a whole-of-society approach to achieve the SDGs.

“As we approach the 2030 deadline, we must recommit to accelerating SDGs’ implementation, especially at the state and local governments level. We need expertise and resources from all sectors to deliver on the SDGs.

“The SDGs require a whole-of-society approach and clearly cannot be achieved with stand-alone policies and projects. They must be carefully integrated into national and sub-national policies and development plans.”

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