At least 8,000 job seekers stormed the University of Nigeria
Teaching Hospital to interview for the position of administrative
officers, on Thursday.
The applicants responded to the university’s local advertisement for
Administrative Officer II. At least, 5,000, were shortlisted for the
interview. The position the job seekers interviewed for –
Administrative Officer II – is one of over thirty categories of workers
the university advertised recently.
Although the university did not indicate the number of
administrative officer vacancies it hopes to employ, a staff of the
university told PREMIUM TIMES not more than 10 applicants will be
employed in each category through the process.
The employment drive began earlier this week. The previous day,
about the same number of jobseekers besieged the school to be
interviewed for positions in paramedics and few auxiliary jobs.
The job seekers, mostly young graduates, overwhelmed the school’s
facilities. Many waited under the sun for hours to be interviewed.
Others sat on bricks for an opportunity to be interviewed.
Enugu, formerly the administrative capital of south east Nigeria, is
the largest city in the zone. it has at least six tertiary institutions
but also one of the highest unemployment and crime rate in Nigeria.
Nigeria Bureau of Statistics says at least 28 per cent of employable
residents of the state are unemployed; a figure many say is
grossly underestimated.
Enugu’s unemployment rate is more than 100 percent higher than the 12 percent recorded in neighbouring Anambra state.
In August this year, at least 6,251 job seekers applied for 400
vacancies at the Universal Basic Education Enugu, with an expected
monthly salary of N18, 000.00.
The job rush at UNTH exemplifies the scorching job shortage in
Nigeria. From a record low of 5.3 per cent in 2006, the Nigeria Bureau
of Statistics admits it has worsened by 400.5 percent to 24 percent at
the end of 2011.
The World Bank estimates that Nigeria’s youth unemployment is high
up at 38 percent. Many Nigerians argue World Bank and government
estimates are conservative.
“In a family of five kids, you will hardly find more than two
employed,” Chinasa Ugwu, one of the applicants, who sought to be an
Environmental Officer II, said. Interviewing for her category was
cancelled by the university.
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