As part of efforts to eliminate the menace of child labour in the country, the Federal Government has revealed that it spent about $100 million in feeding 10 million pupils under the National School Feeding Programme.
The Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, who made the disclosure when the US Ambassador to Nigeria, Mary Leornard and officials of the Department of State paid him a courtesy visit in Abuja, said the Nigerian government had introduced the school feeding programme under its social security programme to lure children engaged in child labour back to school.
Ngige, in a statement issued by the Head of Press and Public Relations in the ministry, Olajide Oshundun, noted that as of today the federal government has spent nearly $100 million to feed 10 million children across the country.
According to him, the government has also taken more schools to areas prone to child labour and made education free in the whole country through the Universal Basic Education and the Child Rights Acts.