The Federal Government has announced a new national skills programme aimed at connecting 20 million young Nigerians to jobs, training, and entrepreneurship opportunities by 2030, with at least 60 per cent of beneficiaries expected to be women.
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βThis is just as Vice President Kashim Shettima has assumed the chairmanship position of the reactivated Board of Generation Unlimited (GenU) Nigeria.
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βThis was made known in a statement signed by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on media and communications (Office of the Vice President), Stanley Nkwocha.
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βSpeaking on Wednesday during the inaugural board meeting of Generation Unlimited Nigeria, Shettima described Nigeriaβs youthful population as the nationβs superpower and comparative advantage in a rapidly ageing world.
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βThe GenU board meeting coincided with International Youth Day 2025, themed βYouth Innovation for a Sustainable Future.β
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ββWith over 60 per cent of our population below the age of 25, we cannot afford to squander this asset. An advantage unrealised is merely potential wasted. We must refine it, we must invest in it, and we must channel it towards productive destinies,β the Vice President said.
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Shettima warned that Nigeriaβs βnational skills ecosystem faces a trilemmaβ with too many young people excluded from the start, training disconnected from livelihoods, and inadequate infrastructure for large-scale hands-on learning.
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ββAnother isolated training scheme will not deliver us from these constraints. What we need is systemic changeβa new architecture built to last,β he added.
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βThe centrepiece of this push is the Digital Access and Livelihoods Initiative, described as a demand-driven national talent pipeline that will link foundational and work-readiness training directly to guaranteed jobs or enterprise pathways.
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ββWe need a platform to unify government, private sector leaders, development partners, and the boundless energy of our youth under a single banner. This is a proposition to attract coordinated investment and replace fragmented efforts with a common front,β Shettima said.
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βThe Vice President pledged that all training under the initiative will align with the National Skills Qualification Framework to ensure that βour young people possess not only the skills to work but the credentials to compete globally.β
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βCharging the new board, in collaboration with UNICEF and other partners, to proceed with full development and implementation of DALI,
β Shettima said, βLet this be the turning point. Let this be the day history remembers as the moment we stopped managing youth unemployment as an inevitable crisis and started unlocking the creative, entrepreneurial, and intellectual capital of our people.
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ββWe owe young Nigerians jobs. We owe them hope. We owe them the future, not just promises, but proof that their country believes in them enough to invest in their success.β
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βIn his remarks, Minister of Youth Development, Ayodele Olawande, said the administrationβs vision is βclear β create jobs, bridge the skills gap, and empower young people through human capital development, not just token gestures.β
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ββNigerian youths are not limited. We have the talent, creativity, and courage to thrive. What we need is a meaningful and enabling environment, and we must work together as one team to create and deliver real impact,β he added.
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βAlso, Special Assistant to the President on Strategy and Policy (Workforce Development), Rimamskeb Nuhu, explained that the government had identified three major challenges facing young Nigerians β foundational skills gap, livelihood disconnect, and infrastructure deficit.
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ββIn response, we created DALI, built on two pillars: equipping underserved communities with foundational digital skills and establishing Renewed Hope digital hubs to scale up existing government efforts,β he noted.
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βThe statement noted that over 10 million youth have already benefited in the first four years from flagship initiatives such as FUCAP Campus Ambassadors Programme (with Unilever), Passport to Earning (P2E) with Microsoft, Green Rising, and the Girlsβ Education and Skills Partnership (GESP) with FCDO, among many others.
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βThe UN Resident Coordinator in Nigeria, Mohamed Fall, urged stakeholders to βreaffirm commitment to Nigerian youths,β describing them as βthe most critical assets of the country and the continent.β
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ββEvery day, Nigerian youths demonstrate their potential. Together, we can drive large-scale impact by leveraging our networks to support initiatives like GenU 9JA β the biggest partnership platform for young people,β Fall added.
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βAlso, UNICEF Nigeria Country Representative and GenU 9JA co-chair, Ms. Wafaa Saeed, said a major achievement of the project was the formal recognition of Youth Agency Marketplace as Nigeriaβs national youth opportunities aggregator, a one-stop digital platform connecting young people to skilling, innovation, volunteering, and economic pathways.
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ββChildren and young people must be at the centre of everything we do. This board meeting, coinciding with International Youth Day, reaffirms our shared belief that young Nigerians are not just beneficiaries of development, they are drivers of change. Through GenU 9JA, we are proving that youth-led transformation at scale is possible,β Saeed said.
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