President Bio unveils national social safety net programme to tackle poverty and inequality

Sierra Leone Telegraph: 27 February 2020:

President Dr Julius Maada Bio has today launched the first phase of Sierra Leone’s Social Safety Net Programme in Kenema, that is aimed at strengthening livelihood systems, through job creation schemes for the poorest, skills development initiatives and micro-enterprise schemes.

Addressing the ceremony which was attended by local people, local chiefs, government officials, legislators, diplomats and development partners, the President announced: “With all of these and more interventions, we hope to level out perceived poverty and inequality disparities and build a skilled labour force with greater earning powers who will also engage in entrepreneurship, and increase national productivity”.

He said he is pleased to recognise the support of the World Bank, UNICEF and DfID, under whose aegis his government has provided predictable income support for almost 183 thousand beneficiaries – used equally for better quality nutrition (40%) and school expenses (44%), while about 12% was used for investing in productive activities or coping with unexpected events.

“So there is a net allocation to investments in the health, nutrition, and education of children. Government further advocated with the World Bank for an additional 30 million USD in order to expand the Social Safety Net Programme to 16 districts in the country, and to further strengthen the key building blocks of the country’s basic national safety net system.

“There is also additional funding set aside as an emergency preparedness fund. This additional funding will provide quarterly income support of 450 thousand Leones per household, targeting 210,000 persons – including at least 13,000 persons living with disabilities, for a period of three years. This intervention will increase the access of poor households to basic services such as health, education, and nutrition,” he said.

President Bio further stated that the said additional financing would also deepen the impact of the Safety Net Programme with respect to human capital development outcomes, hoping it would close gaps, promote behaviour change by increasing demand for health and education services, expand inclusion to the disabled, and improve crisis mitigation and response systems.

The president challenged the National Commission for Social Action (NACSA) to commence the expansion of the Social Safety Net Programme nationwide, and said he expects NACSA to administer the programme effectively at all levels.

He also referenced the country’s National Development Plan, saying that his government has invested heavily in education across board and believes that the outcomes of such human capital development initiatives would not only mitigate the impact of the risks and vulnerabilities among the poor in the medium to long term, but would also create the right platform and environment for inclusive development.

“So free quality education, free healthcare, expanded school feeding programmes, greater access to outpatient health services are all good for our poorest populations. The Medium-Term National Development Plan establishes a sound framework for social protection initiatives. Across all districts, there is a special focus on people living with disabilities.

“Government has already established the Social Insurance Scheme which replaced a dysfunctional civil servant and armed forces pension scheme. We have increased pension payments and initiated the provision of social cash transfers to the aged and vulnerable. My government’s wage, tax, and pensions policies have been driven by the need to close income disparities and put more money into the hands of the poorest and the most vulnerable,” the president said.

President Bio closed by noting that of most importance, are the impacts of the programme on childhood nutrition, expanded access to healthcare, support for access to education, especially for poor girls and by extension for the future of the country.

“We aspire to a country where old age, disability, gender, and socio-economic class can no longer dictate the limits of our capacity and achievement… where we will keep the poorest children in school, prevent malnourishment and stunting, support their healthy growth and development so that they not only realise their full potential by age 18, but also go on to become skilled, healthy, and resourceful adults,” he said.

Commissioner of NaCSA, Bockarie Kokofele, said that the programme which caters for 35,000 households, would target predominantly women as key beneficiaries with 13,000 being persons with disabilities. He said that the additional financing would help government to expand the programme to other parts of the country.

Minister of Finance, Jacob Jusu Saffa, said that the programme is in line with the President’s agenda for human capital development, adding that it would help to empower persons living with disability to be self-reliant. He called on beneficiaries to make good use of the funding.

World Bank Country Manager, Gayle Martin, congratulated the President and the Government of Sierra Leone on the launch of the programme. She said that the Bank is providing US$30 million as part of their efforts to help the Government reduce poverty in the country.

But notable by its absence is funding to help poor parents purchase sanitary pads for menstruating girls that are losing almost sixty days of schooling every year, which put them at great disadvantage to boys. Instead the government – through the office of the First Lady – Mrs Fatima Bio, has launched a global go-fund-me appeal to raise funds to help pay for sanitary pads for school girls.

There are calls for this undignified begging mentally to stop, and for government to make proper and adequate provision in its Free Quality Education Programme to help parents pay for much needed sanitary pads for school girls through subsidy.

3 Comments

  1. I congratulate our brother and president of the Republic of Sierra Leone for putting all those services for the people of the whole country and not sectional. This is the type of leadership Sierra Leone has always needed to start a very long development to growth. As Sierra Leonean, I am and will always be with the president for all his hard work in the country.

    Brothers and siters help the president to bring all those plans to fruition and not only talk as before. The president is quite willing to put all his projects into action and please let there not be anyone to hinder those programmes.
    LONG LIVE SIERRA LEONE AND HER PEOPLE. MAY GOD OR ALLAH BLESS THE COUNTRY

  2. Oh. Another debt again? Is that $30 million dollars truly a help or another debt for us and future generations to pay? Does the World Bank really means help? Nothing to be paid in return? I don’t get that. I would be very happy, if the World Bank could clarify whether this amount is a grant or debt. God bless the World Bank for making this kind gesture to Sierra Leone.

  3. Sounds like an exact or similar initiative launched by the previous EBK regime which albeit its fanfare, the virus of corruption rendered its purpose and objectives useless. We remain optimistic for the reintroduction of the failed scheme under the new regime. I guess time will be our best judge here. We will wait to see if anything changes.

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