In a press release in his
office in Abuja, after a marathon consultative meeting with 21 chief executives
of agencies under the Federal Ministry of Education, the Minister said the
refusal,
and or inability of States to access their share of the fund is
strangulating the development of basic education nationwide; a development he
described as ‘unfortunate’.
Worried by the deplorable
conditions under which children of poor parents attend classes beneath trees
for lack of classrooms, Minister of State for Education, Prof. Anthony Anwukah,
has tasked State Governments across the country to, as a matter of urgency,
access the over N41bn made available.
It was made available by
the Federal Government through the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC)
to improve on education infrastructure at that level.
The former university Vice
Chancellor said the necessity for states to access this fund cannot be over
emphasized, noting that doing otherwise is not only depriving the country’s
children the conducive learning environment they require to excel, but is also
depriving Nigerians of thousands of employment windows that could be generated
if N41 billion is injected into the economy through such productive activities.
Professor Anwukah noted
that it’s economically wasteful to allow such bogus amount of money to lay
dormant, especially at a time the country is in dire need of improving its
Gross Domestic Product (GDP), given the shortfall in crude oil earnings.
While acknowledging that
only Borno State is up to date in accessing its share of UBEC funds-out of the
36 State of the Federation, the Minister disclosed that Abia State is leading
the pack of defaulting States with its share lying dormant for the past 4
years. Some of the reasons given by the Minister for the current rate of
default by States include; the inability of beneficiary states to account for
previous allocations, inability to pay 50% of their counterpart funding and in
some cases, outright lack of commitment to the course of basic education.
Ruling out the possibility
of altering the ratio of contribution between the Federal and State Governments
which stands at 50:50 currently, the Minister said he will continue to exert
the necessary pressure on states to access their fund as and when due in the
interest of the Nigerian child.
Professor Onwukah also
noted that some of the primary schools where some children attend classes under
tree shelter are sometimes used as polling centres during elections where
politicians garner their votes, only to turn their backs on these children,
forgetting that the same children will make up tomorrows voters.
Acknowledging the current
economic realities in the country made worse by the global fall in the price of
crude oil, Prof. Anwukah noted that acceessment of UBEC funds by States is a
matter of political will and commitment.
No comments:
Post a Comment