By Olamide Francis
The Kwara State Government on Monday began a week long medical screening exercise for 4,500 food vendors ahead of official take off of its Home Grown School Feeding Programme.
“We are screening 4,500 food vendors across the 16 local government areas for students of primary 1-6. The Federal Government will take care of primary 1-3 students while the state government will take care of primary 4-6 students,” Kwara State Focal Persons for the National Social Investment Programme, Hajia Bashirah AbdulRazaq said in a statement.
Hajia AbdulRazaq who said the exercise is in batches assured applicants that more food vendors would be invited for the medical screening.
Addressing newsmen on the sideline of the exercise in Ilorin, Administration Manager, Harmony Advanced Diagnostic Centre, Ilorin, Yemi Abegunde said the exercise is to ascertain the health status of all candidates for the state home grown school feeding programme.
“This exercise, as you are aware that the state government wants to start feeding school children is to screen food vendors. The government wants to ascertain if they have any ailment that could affect the children (students) that they will be catering for,” Abegunde said.
“We want to know if they have liver problem, if they are HIV positive, if they have tuberculosis, if they have chest or lung problem that could affect the health of the children they will be providing the food for.
“Our assignment (screening) here is to find out if the food vendors have ailments that could affect the school children. Once we observe anything from anyone of them, we will remove.”
Abegunde however said that the government would not enlist those discovered not medically fit into the school feeding programme.
A food vendor, Kemi Tejumola from Omu-Aran Irepodun Local Government, on her part, expressed delight over the seamless screening process which she said was necessary in the interest of pupils and students who would be the major beneficiaries of the school feeding programme.