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Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro - Politics - Nairaland

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Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by JAOS(op): 1:26pm On May 17
Nigeria’s Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Dr Bernard M. Doro, says the country is shifting toward a more coordinated and results-driven approach to humanitarian response and poverty reduction, with a focus on moving vulnerable Nigerians toward productivity and long-term stability.

In this interview with OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE, he speaks on the need to end fragmented interventions, strengthen the National Social Register, and build a unified system that connects humanitarian support to measurable outcomes.
Why was the recent National Council on Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction important?

The Council represents a shift from isolated efforts to coordinated action. It brings together federal, state, and local actors, along with development partners, to align strategies and responses.

Nigeria‘s challenges are interconnected. Poverty, displacement, and vulnerability cannot be addressed in silos. The Council provides a platform for joint planning, shared responsibility, and collective execution.

It is designed to ensure that everyone is working within a common framework.

What role does the ministry play within this framework?

The Ministry provides leadership and coordination. Since its establishment, it has been responsible for aligning humanitarian response, disaster management, and social protection efforts across the country.

Through its agencies, the Ministry supports millions of Nigerians affected by conflict, economic hardship, and climate-related challenges, providing assistance that ranges from food and shelter to healthcare and livelihood support.

Our role is to ensure that these efforts are coordinated and aligned with broader national objectives.

Can you point to measurable progress so far?

Yes. The Conditional Cash Transfer programme, which is anchored on the National Social Register, has reached over 8.3 million households, impacting more than 35 million Nigerians.[/b]

We are working to expand this to 15 million households. But beyond the numbers, the focus is on outcomes. The objective is to ensure that support leads to improved livelihoods and greater economic participation.

[b]What are the key challenges you have identified?


The biggest challenge is fragmentation. When institutions operate independently without coordination, resources are not used efficiently, and the overall impact is reduced.

Nigeria’s scale of need is significant, and no single institution can address it alone. That is why coordination, shared data, and aligned policies are essential.

Without these, we risk duplicating efforts and failing to reach those who need support most.

Is this what informed the creation of the National Council?

Yes. The Council was established to address fragmentation and provide a structured platform for coordination.

Its approval by the Federal Executive Council reflects the importance of humanitarian response and poverty reduction as national priorities. It is not symbolic; it is intended to drive alignment, improve efficiency, and deliver measurable outcomes.

What does success look like for this Council?

Success means moving from parallel interventions to a unified system, which we describe as “One Humanitarian, One Poverty Response System.”

It means shared data, coordinated financing, aligned policies, and clear outcomes across all levels of government. In practical terms, it means that every intervention contributes to a common goal.

How urgent is the situation Nigeria faces today?

The situation is urgent. Over 25 million Nigerians require humanitarian assistance annually, and a significant portion of the population lives in multidimensional poverty.

States and local governments are on the frontline of this challenge. Strengthening their capacity, through funding, data systems, and technical support, is essential.

At the same time, all stakeholders must be involved. The government alone cannot address these challenges. The private sector, civil society, development partners, and communities all have a role to play.

You have spoken strongly about integration. What does this mean in practice?

Integration means connecting humanitarian response with long-term development. It ensures that interventions are not isolated, but part of a broader system that supports recovery, resilience, and economic inclusion.

When systems are integrated, they are more accountable, more sustainable, and more effective.

What are your immediate priorities?

First, strengthening the National Social Register as the backbone of targeting and coordination. Second, deepening ownership at the state and local levels, because solutions must be driven from within communities. Third, creating clear pathways that enable individuals and households to move from vulnerability to productivity.

What message would you leave with stakeholders?

The focus must be on action, collaboration, and accountability.

If we work together within a shared framework, we can build a system that responds effectively to humanitarian needs while creating real opportunities for people to improve their lives.

No Nigerian should face a crisis alone. That is the direction we are working toward.

Can you speak on your mission and mandate as Minister?

I assumed office in November 2025 with a clear mandate aligned with the core responsibilities of the Ministry, which include coordinating humanitarian response, disaster management, and social protection for vulnerable populations.

Our focus is on building a system that is structured, accountable, and responsive. This involves strengthening policy coordination, improving inter-agency collaboration, and deploying technology to enhance service delivery. Ultimately, the goal is to ensure that interventions are not only timely but effective and measurable.

How is the Ministry coordinating poverty reduction efforts under the current administration?

We are strengthening the National Social Register as the foundation for targeting and coordination. A unified social protection system is critical if we are to achieve meaningful results.

In the past, fragmentation has reduced the impact of interventions. What we are doing now is aligning programmes, deepening collaboration with state and local governments, and creating clear pathways that allow beneficiaries to move from vulnerability to productivity.

Poverty reduction must go beyond relief. It must be structured in a way that leads to economic inclusion and long-term stability.
https://thenationonlineng.net/over-8-3m-households-benefited-from-conditional-cash-transfer-programme-doro/

Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Burob: 1:30pm On May 17
Enjoy, u will end up in prison after all said & done.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by tommykiwi(m): 2:16pm On May 17
This guy's really get mind abeg. Telling lies up and down
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Stephen0mozzy: 2:17pm On May 17
How una take count them o... No household in my family tree got this money sha.

Abi e get the side of Nigeria wey una give?
I dey wait for the day wey we go get one kain office of ACCOUNTABILITY GENERAL OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA, under a reasonable government... All these men o too go jail.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Tenses: 2:17pm On May 17
You people would think us a fool.

If you are sincere publish the beneficiaries.

If 8.3 million household got any conditional transfer then every 30 persons you know at least 5 got it assuming our population is 250 million.

tinubu ole
Ole tinubu.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Tareq1105: 2:18pm On May 17
Burob:
Enjoy, u will end up in prison after all said & done.
I don't believe in this Cash transfer. It's fraudulent.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by oz4real83(m): 2:19pm On May 17
8.3million households in the spirit world😏
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Endinjustice: 2:19pm On May 17
Lies lies lies and more lies. That's apc and tinubu strategy.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Brightest04(m): 2:20pm On May 17
Stephen0mozzy:
How una take count them o... No household in my family tree got this money sha.

Abi e get the side of Nigeria wey una give?
I dey wait for the day wey we go get one kain office of ACCOUNTABILITY GENERAL OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA, under a reasonable government... All these men o too go jail.
You're going too far, in the entire town I live noone have ever mistakenly smelt any kind of such money
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by mastermaestro(m): 2:22pm On May 17
Ha! Tinubu is busy making Buhari look like a saint. cry
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Marvellee: 2:22pm On May 17
Oya if you collected any conditional cash transfer, kindly raise up your hands
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Precious201010(m): 2:23pm On May 17
None of my family member benefited, none of my neighbour, none of my church member, none of my friends, not even an enemy that I know of... So who are those beneficiaries?
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by orikoku: 2:24pm On May 17
For the whole of my area, I never see anyone who benefits from government goodies.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Stephen0mozzy: 2:25pm On May 17
Brightest04:
You're going too far, in the entire town I live noone have ever mistakenly smelt any kind of such money
No body to hold them accountable... And it's the shame. They just come up with schemes to either cover up for frauds or siphon monies to their cronies.

God help us sha.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by henrycloud: 2:25pm On May 17
Liar liar liar liar liar liar!
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by SmallmebigGod: 2:27pm On May 17
Tenses:
You people would think us a fool.

If you are sincere publish the beneficiaries.

If 8.3 million households got any conditional transfer then every 30 person you know at least 5 got it assuming our population is 250 million.

tinubu ole
Ole tinubu.
This is the real question. How come no one knows anyone directly at least. The program is fraud they should channel the fund to something else
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by chiefolododo(m): 2:27pm On May 17
Show proof , show evidence

They said they wanted to help the poor, they defrauded them instead

Heartless!!
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Mightym: 2:28pm On May 17
Una Dey try no be small. Well done. This 8.3m house hold na for Nigeria or Niger republic?
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by CodeTemplar:
When USA transfered abacha loot to Nigerian i saw testifiers. Today govt is doing more allegedly but no visibility.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by DeLaRue: 2:36pm On May 17
Can we have an independent private auditing firm to audit this claim.

The President should engage PWC, EY, or Delloitte to investigate and tell which country the people they pay to live in, as I am not sure anyone who knows anyone that knows anyone that receives this money.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Franking: 2:39pm On May 17
The mother of all corruption. Only a government that wants to perpetuate corruption will claim unverifiable money transfers....this is crazy.

Too much money is being stolen because no one cares about Nigeria. People are more interested in their tribes.

Is it not better to divide the country and bring out the patriotism in people for their country? Nobody loves or cares for Nigeria.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by EmekaBlue(m): 2:40pm On May 17
Cho Cho Cho... All talks no action. I guess in Hausa villages households abi. Because nothing like this in the Southeast.
They have really embezzled billions of naira on this project for sure.

Naija remains the corruption capital of the world.

Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Sensiblerealist(m): 2:42pm On May 17
The money these politicians keep saying they doled out, me noor dey understand oooo.
Make we do a poll of people that got this conditional cash transfer and others on Nairaland first.
8.3 million households kwah! Not even 8.3 million individuals.
Diaaris God ooooo
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by NATIONALPASTOR: 2:44pm On May 17
We will remember all of you one day to deal with you one by one.

All of una go run leave Asorock.

Imagine these slowpokes, what do they take Nigerians for?

We are already building a prison for these useless corrupt clowns in Sambisa forest.

They should show us the register if they're 419.
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by sunnytechhimsel: 2:47pm On May 17
Conditional cash transfer of 419 right?
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by ceejay80s(m): 2:48pm On May 17
and those families are very rich now or almost richer than Dangote abi?
keep fooling urself,
money wey dem send to their family members
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by OredoPikin: 2:48pm On May 17
JAOS:
https://thenationonlineng.net/over-8-3m-households-benefited-from-conditional-cash-transfer-programme-doro/
Who are these people na
U dont pull people out of poverty by giving them crumbs
How do some people see this president as smart self
How na
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by OredoPikin: 2:50pm On May 17
Tareq1105:
I don't believe in this Cash transfer. It's fraudulent.
Is this even how to run a govt
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Oakenshield: 2:53pm On May 17
Ghost beneficiaries were dey receive
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Eraddray(m): 2:55pm On May 17
Audio household... The money that never got to anybody
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by themanderon: 2:55pm On May 17
This is an excellent conduit for corruption. Who can verify this claim? How many households per state and what was the criteria for choosing these households?
Re: Over 8.3m Households Benefited From Conditional Cash Transfer Programme – Doro by Mercury12(m): 3:02pm On May 17
Who received this money?
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