This female graduate was spotted on Thursday, November 12, in
Abuja walking from the National Assembly complex to Federal Secretariat
searching for an employment.
The lady was seen holding a carbon paper where “Am a graduate, I need
a job. Nigerians help me” and her phone number was written on it.
The desperate young lady and her act triggered mixed reactions among
Nigerians. While some people wished her good luck, others criticized her
and noticed that she was illiterate. See another photo after the cut...
“The situation is that bad… There ain’t jobs for the youths out there.. The government should do something about it,” Glowy shoe wrote.
“So thoughtful of her… How I wish she was in Lagos because Lagos
is pretty fair in gettig jobs compare to Abuja. I wish her all the best
and may her heart desires come to pass,” Royal Priesthood wished her.
“I’m a graduate, not AM a graduate. Isn’t it shameful how most
‘graduates’ in Nigeria do not know the difference between I’m and am?
“By the way, I need a job, not “I need job”.
Madam graduate, it’s a fiercely competitive labour market out there. At
this rate, you might stand a better chance of getting ‘job’ by putting
your School Cert forward and downplaying your ‘graduate’ status,” Hedonistic wrote.
“I will pass the info to Buhari. I believe he won’t call you
unemployable because he has never been a member of the PDP like Amechi
that publicly declared that most Nigerian youths that fought for the
mandate are unemployable,” Victorels noted.
“HELP, not HELp, MY not My, since she’s using only upper case
letters. Wow! People do pay attention to details like these. How would
she write an application letter correctly?” AQO wondered.
Some people even recalled that a Nigerian guy in the UK tried to find a job in a similar way.
“Well, desperate time calls for desperate actions… I remember a
guy who tried the same thing in UK, got a job through that means. Good
luck to her!” Kaka wished to the young lady.
“A Nigerian guy tried this in UK and it worked wonders for him. A
Nigerian girl is replicating same act here in the capital city, I hope
it does for her too.”
On November 4, the Nigerian Senate went against the motion for the payment of N5,000 monthly allowance
to unemployed youths in the country. The motion which was sponsored by
Senator Philip Aduda was turned down by a massive shout of ‘’no, no’’ in
the house.
Meanwhile, Chris Ngige, a new minister of Labour and Employment, has assured Nigerians of the readiness of the ministry to tackle the menace of unemployment in the country.
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