National – Citizen Voices Empowerment Foundation https://www.cvef.org.ng Turning Voices to Action for Socioeconomic and Climate Justice, and Empowering Communities to Drive Meaningful Change Sun, 27 Jul 2025 12:41:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://sitepad.com/?v=5.1.6 https://www.cvef.org.ng/sitepad-data/uploads/2025/07/cropped-CVEF-Logo-Empowering-Voices-for-Change-1-32x32.png National – Citizen Voices Empowerment Foundation https://www.cvef.org.ng 32 32 Press Release: Lack of Structural Youth Empowerment a Major Obstacle to Nigeria’s Development – Oketa Calls for Immediate Establishment of National Youth Fund https://www.cvef.org.ng/post-press-release-lack-of-structural-youth-empowerment-a-major-obstacle-to-nigerias-development-oketa-calls-for-immediate-establishment-of-national-youth-fund/ Sun, 13 Jul 2025 02:58:09 +0000 https://cvef.org.ng/?p=559

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Date: 12th July 2025

Lack of Structural Youth Empowerment a Major Obstacle to Nigeria’s Development – Oketa Calls for Immediate Establishment of National Youth Fund

Abuja, Nigeria – As Nigeria continues to confront persistent youth unemployment, underemployment, and a growing sense of exclusion, leadership advocate and youth development strategist, Ijigban Daniel Oketa, has called for urgent action to institutionalize youth empowerment as a national priority.

In a strong policy framework submitted to the National Youth Conference 2025 Committee, Oketa emphasized that youth empowerment must go beyond slogans to become structurally embedded in government policy. He described Nigeria’s current fragmented and short-term approach to youth programs as “a significant barrier to national growth and cohesion.”

“Youth are the engine of growth and the most productive force in the economy. But without institutionalized support, we are wasting our greatest national asset,” Oketa said.

He stressed that a structured and inclusive empowerment framework would help eliminate systemic inequality and reduce the culture of “survival of the fittest” that often drives corruption and political manipulation.

Referencing a statement by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu—“Youth will not be exploited to do the bidding of the government. Instead, our administration will work with and for the youth, providing them with a platform through which they may fulfill their greatest aspirations”—Oketa urged the government to match rhetoric with decisive action.

He called on the National Assembly to accelerate the passage of the bill for the National Youth Fund for Economic Empowerment and Leadership, which is currently under review. His policy submission includes recommendations such as:

·         Expanding the youth beneficiary age limit and reason.

·         Establishing a 10-year structural funding plan to support youth entrepreneurship and leadership programs.

·         Appointing a visionary youth CEO of certain age bracket to lead the Fund’s secretariat.

·         Integrating the Fund into the national budget with annual impact and financial reports.


“This Fund, if passed and implemented transparently, will not only transform lives but also restore hope and inspire a new generation of productive citizens,” Oketa added.

The National Youth Fund, he said, must become the institutional platform through which Nigerian youth access real opportunities to innovate, build, and lead.

Ijigban Daniel Oketa
Executive Director: Citizen Voices Empowerment Foundation and Convener- National Youth Coalition for Transformative Leadership Initiative (NYC-TLI)
Abuja Nigeria.

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Does the National Youth Conference Hold the Key to Youth Empowerment and Leadership in Nigeria? https://www.cvef.org.ng/post-does-the-national-youth-conference-hold-the-key-to-youth-empowerment-and-leadership-in-nigeria/ https://www.cvef.org.ng/post-does-the-national-youth-conference-hold-the-key-to-youth-empowerment-and-leadership-in-nigeria/#respond Thu, 10 Jul 2025 17:51:28 +0000 https://cvef.org.ng/?p=538

In a time when Nigeria’s future hangs in the balance, one question has never been more critical: can our youth be truly empowered to lead, build, and transform the nation? President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in a powerful affirmation, recently declared:

“Youth will not be exploited to do the bidding of the government. Instead, our administration will work with and for the youth, providing them with a platform through which they may fulfill their greatest aspirations.”

This vision finds tangible expression in the National Youth Conference 2025, a flagship initiative of the Federal Ministry of Youth Development under the Honourable Minister Ayodele Olawande. More than just a gathering of young people, this conference represents a national movement - a pivotal opportunity to unlock the voices, talents, and potential of millions of Nigerian youth at home and in the diaspora.

A Turning Point for Nigerian Youth


The National Youth Conference (Confab) is not just another dialogue platform. It is Nigeria’s largest youth-led participatory space, designed to draw input from all 360 federal constituencies, the six geopolitical zones, and Nigerian youth abroad. It aims to promote inclusive decision-making, foster civic responsibility, and ensure that government policies reflect the real needs, insights, and innovations of young Nigerians.

This is a generational moment. At its core, the Confab seeks to answer a simple but vital question: How can Nigeria’s youth be empowered not just to survive, but to lead?

What the Youth Confab hopes to Deliver


1. Providing a Platform for Youth Voices:
Young people are often spoken about, but rarely spoken with. The conference provides a structured avenue for youth participation in national policy, ensuring that ideas generated from the grassroots find their way into actual policy action. This represents a strategic departure from tokenistic consultations toward genuine engagement.

2. Promoting National Unity and Cohesion:
Nigeria’s diversity is a strength—but only when it is harmonized. By bringing together youth from varied ethnic, religious, and socioeconomic backgrounds, the Confab fosters dialogue that builds bridges and reinforces a shared national identity. This is critical in a country often divided along fault lines.

3. Addressing Pressing Youth Challenges:
From unemployment to inadequate access to quality education and healthcare, the conference will offer a platform to brainstorm practical, youth-informed solutions. It acknowledges that those closest to the problems are also closest to the solutions.

4. Enhancing Networking and Collaboration:
The Youth Confab will be a melting pot of talent, innovation, and ambition. It presents young Nigerians with opportunities to connect, co-create, and collaborate across sectors—unlocking peer-to-peer mentorship, business partnerships, and leadership synergies that can outlive the event itself.

5. Strengthening Youth Institutions:
No nation can rise beyond the quality of its institutions. A critical outcome of the conference will be reimagining and reforming existing youth-focused structures, such as the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), to ensure relevance in the 21st century. It is time to move from outdated bureaucracies to responsive and dynamic institutions.

6. Developing Actionable Policy Recommendations:
What makes the Confab truly transformational is that it will not end with speeches and slogans.

Every dialogue session, breakout group, and roundtable should feed into clear, implementable policy documents—with a direct pathway to government adoption. The intention is action, not rhetoric.

The Time for Symbolism is Over

Nigeria has witnessed countless conferences, panels, and white papers on youth development. But this time must be different. The National Youth Conference 2025 must not be a one-off; it must become an institutional platform for continuous youth-government engagement.

Empowering youth is no longer optional it is a national survival strategy. From agriculture to tech, education to climate innovation, Nigeria’s young population holds the keys to economic rebirth and political transformation. But to unleash this potential, we must go beyond inclusion as a slogan—we must practice it as policy.

Conclusion: A Call to Bold Action


If implemented with sincerity, openness, and institutional backing, the National Youth Conference 2025 has the power to shift Nigeria’s developmental trajectory. It can activate a new generation of leaders who are not waiting to inherit power, but who are ready to co-create the future with wisdom, integrity, and urgency.

The real test will not be the size of the gathering, but the scale of impact it produces. Let this not be a ceremony of words, but a catalyst for youth-led governance, enterprise, and innovation.

As a nation, we owe our youth more than promises; we owe them platforms. Let this be that platform.

Let the National Youth Confab be the spark that lights the fire of national renewal.

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Ijigban Daniel Oketa is the Founder of Citizen Voices Empowerment Foundation and Convener of the National Youth Coalition for Transformative Leadership Initiative (NYC-TLI). He is a leadership strategist and youth advocate working at the intersection of policy, civic innovation, and entrepreneurship.

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A New Nigeria Begins with the National Youth Coalition for Transformative Leadership” https://www.cvef.org.ng/post-a-new-nigeria-begins-with-the-national-youth-coalition-for-transformative-leadership-initiative/ https://www.cvef.org.ng/post-a-new-nigeria-begins-with-the-national-youth-coalition-for-transformative-leadership-initiative/#respond Tue, 10 Jun 2025 18:14:58 +0000 https://cvef.org.ng/?p=544

Nigeria stands at a defining moment in her history. A moment where the frustration of the past meets the urgency of the future. A moment where millions of young people, weary of broken promises and recycled leadership, are awakening to the reality that change will not come from above; it must rise from within. It is within this context that the National Youth Coalition for Transformative Leadership Initiative (NYC-TLI) emerges as not just necessary but urgent.


Why Now?

Nigeria is home to over 100 million young people under the age of 35 — a generation full of creativity, energy, and ambition. Yet, this demographic remains grossly underrepresented in governance, overlooked in policy, and often used as political pawns rather than powerful participants. As the country moves closer to the 2027 and 2031 general elections, it is clear: the youth must no longer be spectators or tools but become leaders and architects.

The country is burdened with leadership deficits that have resulted in corruption, poor infrastructure, insecurity, and economic stagnation. For too long, power has been recycled among those who lack the vision, integrity, and urgency to move the nation forward. It is time to disrupt that pattern — not with violence or chaos, but with organized, strategic, and values-driven youth leadership.

The Birth of a Visionary Movement

The National Youth Coalition for Transformative Leadership Initiative (NYC-TLI) is not just another platform. It is a nationwide, youth-led movement with a singular mission:

To unite, equip, and mobilize Nigerian youth to take ownership of the country's future through ethical, inclusive, and visionary leadership.

At the core of NYC-TLI is a bold vision: That by the year 2031, a youthful, thoughtful Nigerian with the strategy, character, and competence to build a new Nigeria will emerge as President, leading the nation and the African continent into a new era of transformation that may transcend centuries.

What Makes NYC-TLI Different?

This coalition is built on the foundation of: Strategic Leadership Development – Training young Nigerians across all states in governance, policy, and civic responsibility.

1. Nationwide Mobilization – Building a network of youth hubs in schools, campuses, local governments, and the diaspora.

2. Issue-Based Engagement – Focusing on results, not rhetoric — and policies that reflect the real aspirations of Nigerians.

3. Inclusive and Ethical Leadership – Prioritizing integrity, justice, innovation, and unity above tribe, religion, or class.

The 2027–2031 Roadmap

NYC-TLI is not aiming for instant political takeovers — it is building momentum. The roadmap is clear:

In 2027, Nigerian youth must influence and shape the outcome of the elections with conscious, united votes and grassroots coordination.
In 2031, a youth-led candidacy must emerge; one capable of delivering the long-sought transformation and restoring the soul of the nation.

This is not mere idealism. It is a strategic revolution of values, minds, and systems.

A Global Movement, A National Mandate

This is more than a political initiative. It is a global call to action. NYC-TLI invites partners, institutions, civil society, and development organizations to align with its vision for a transformed Nigeria. The coalition is not anti-elder; it is pro-youth and pro-progress, seeking intergenerational collaboration with a youthful lead.

In Conclusion: Nigeria Cannot Wait Any Longer

Every generation has a defining mission. For Nigerian youth, that mission is clear: to reclaim our future and rebuild our nation. The urgency is real. The potential is within reach. But the question remains:

Will this generation rise to the occasion or retreat into history as just another wasted opportunity?


Let it be known that the National Youth Coalition for Transformative Leadership Initiative has chosen to rise. Now, it's your turn.

📣 Join the Movement Today
Visit www.cvef.org.ng/youthcoalition
Follow us on social media @YouthCoalitionNigeria | +234 704 187 0557
Together, we can deliver the Nigeria we deserve.

Powered By Citizen Voices Empowerment Foundation (CVEF)

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Why the JAMB Act Must Be Repealed and Amended https://www.cvef.org.ng/repeal-and-amend-jamb-act-now/ https://www.cvef.org.ng/repeal-and-amend-jamb-act-now/#respond Sat, 03 May 2025 19:09:37 +0000 https://cvef.org.ng/?p=286
National-ASSEMBLY - Leadership - URGENT

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) was established by an Act of the National Assembly in 1978 to unify admission processes into tertiary institutions in Nigeria. At that time, Nigeria had a population of just over 60 million, a limited number of tertiary institutions, and relatively few candidates seeking higher education. In that context, the JAMB Act was practical and timely. 

However, as of 2025—and long before now—Nigeria’s population has exceeded 220 million, with nearly 1,000 higher institutions and millions of candidates seeking tertiary education annually. In this modern era, JAMB has outlived its relevance and now operates contrary to international best practices. Below are compelling reasons the JAMB Act must be repealed and amended:

1. Illegal Revenue Generation: JAMB, a government agency, has been transformed  into a revenue-generating enterprise, contradicting its founding Act. It remits billions of naira to the Federal Government annually while financially burdening millions of Nigerian youths aspiring for higher education.

2. Duplication of Entry Exams (Post-UTME): Despite passing the JAMB exam, candidates are still required to write post-UTME exams by individual institutions. This duplicative process increases financial strain and further complicates the admission journey for students and families.

3. One-Year Validity of Results: JAMB results are only valid for one academic year. Fewer than 50% of candidates gain admission yearly, and those left behind must retake the exam the following year. This system is wasteful and mentally taxing for young Nigerians.

4. Barriers to Foreign Students and Revenue Loss: JAMB’s restrictive processes prevent international students from applying to Nigerian institutions. The requirement to travel to Nigeria to sit for JAMB or post-UTME discourages foreign applicants, resulting in lost opportunities for foreign direct investment (FDI) and international revenue generation.   If one argues that foreign students do not require writing JAMB UTME or Post UTIME and they should only present their WAEC result and be considered for admission, then why should Nigerian write need or write JAMB UTME? What a great injustice and bias?  

5. Psychological and Emotional Torture: Many students who fail to gain admission despite passing JAMB suffer psychological trauma. The emotional toll can affect their confidence, motivation, and mental well-being, with long-term consequences.

6. Widespread Corruption and Unhealthy Competition: Recent revelations about score manipulation and malpractices have damaged the integrity of JAMB. It also fuels unnecessary competition among young candidates over scores that, in many cases, do not determine final admission outcomes.

7. Death and Misfortune:  Students are often assigned to examination centers far from their homes, and even at odd hours. Recently, some candidates have been kidnapped and others killed in motor accidents while traveling for the exam. These tragedies highlight the unnecessary risks JAMB imposes on young Nigerians.

 

8. Against Global Perspective: Globally, including in developing nations, there is no equivalent of JAMB operating as a centralized examination gatekeeper. In most systems, individual institutions are empowered to admit students directly, under regulatory oversight. Nigeria must align with international norms that promote access, innovation, and institutional autonomy.Countries like the United Kingdom earn billions from Nigerian students annually due to simplified and welcoming admission systems. In contrast, our system discourages even domestic applicants, let alone foreign ones.


9. Malfunctioning of Systems and Mass Failure: in the 2025 UTME, where about two (2) million candidates sat for the examination, only 25% scored above 200 (which is the cut off mark). This means over 1.5 million people will registered again and new entrants to rewrite again in 2026 to generate may be N30 to N50 billion naira for the ‘hungry’ Federal Government. And as a result of an alleged system glitch, which JAMB has failed to admit, there was so much disparity such that students who scored above 200 in 2023 and over 300 in 2024 now scored just above 100. Some of them are threatening to take their own lives. 

Recommendations

We therefore call on the National Assembly to urgently repeal and amend the JAMB Act to reflect modern realities:

  1. 1. JAMB should be restructured into a purely regulatory body, not an examination body.
  2. 2. Tertiary institutions should conduct their own entrance exams and interviews, supervised and regulated by JAMB. Institutions should submit the data of admitted students to JAMB for central records and national planning.

Call to Action

Let this serve as a formal petition to the National Assembly. If this issue is not raised and addressed in the Senate and House of Representatives within the next seven (7) days, we will be compelled to mobilize a peaceful protest at the National Assembly and JAMB headquarters.

JAMB UTME should end in 2025. whatever police, law or regulation that no longer serves the best interest of the people must be repealed, revoked or abolished.

The law is made for the people—not the people for the law.

Yours Sincerely,
Daniel Oketa
Executive Director / Founder
Citizen Voices Empowerment Foundation (CVEF) 
0704 187 0557


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