Tag: Students Loan

  • Private varsities deserve students loan too

    Private varsities deserve students loan too

    • By Sunday Olagunju

    Sir: The revitalization of the students loan scheme by the present government has appropriately positioned education where it belongs and has portrayed the government as lover of education and friend of the Nigerian students. Both the Presidency and the National Assembly deserve a pat at the back for the dispatch by which the bill was passed and assented to become law.

     Education is an inalienable right of every Nigerian child, but paucity of funds, coupled with poor engagements of many parents due to the harsh economic realities of our time, have tried to rob many children of such right.

    Today, the Act establishing the Nigerian Loan Fund (NEFUND) only makes provision for students in public tertiary institutions to benefit from the loan. But some education experts seem to be kicking against the present dichotomy between students in public and private tertiary institutions, where the former remains the sole beneficiary of the scheme.

    What is sauce for the goose must also be sauce for the gander. This is reminiscence of the George Orwell’s Animal Farm where some animals see themselves as less privileged because of their location. Suddenly, the scheme seems to have placed students in public tertiary institution as more privileged than their counterparts in the private tertiary institutions.

    With the advent of private tertiary institution, there is a growing misconception among some segment of the Nigerian populace that only the nouve riche Nigerians send their children to private tertiary institutions.

    Given the apparent yearly failures at the UTME and the limited spaces in public tertiary institutions, the emergence of private varsities should be seen as providing an urgent catalyst to an otherwise serious educational crisis. Apart from private tertiary institutions as being on rescue mission in the country’s educational sector, many parents are poor Nigerians who pay the humongous fees charged in these institutions through their noses.

    Such parents also deserve some breathing space if only their children too can be part of the beneficiaries of the student’s loan scheme.

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    The NEFUND management can take statistics of private tertiary institutions with a view of recommending those who possess the qualifications to be so admitted to benefit from the scheme.

    Authorities of those institutions should be made as guarantors with the undertaking to pay in case the beneficiaries defaulted to pay back the loanable funds in future. These private varsities have come to stay and it is doubtful if any of them will, because of such loan, close up the institutions for probable evasion of payment.

    Students in either public or private tertiary institutions are bona fide Nigerians who should be entitled to whatever benefit the government of the country can give to advance their cause and well being. The president as prime mover of this loan scheme and as the father of the nation, should empathise with thousands of parents who are quivering feverishly under excruciating burden to pay the school fees of their children in private tertiary institutions at both home and abroad.

    The extension of the benefits to such children will no doubt put them at par with their colleagues in the public tertiary institutions and no one will claim to be more Nigerian or less Nigerian than the other.

    •Sunday Olagunju,

    Ibadan, Oyo State

  • NANS seeks sack of VCs allegedly sabotaging student’s loan

    NANS seeks sack of VCs allegedly sabotaging student’s loan

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has called for sack of some Vice Chancellors reportedly planning unjustifiable increments in tuition and other fees.

    NANS said the purported increment is clearly designed to sabotage successful implementation of the Federal Government’s Student Loan Scheme.

    A statement by NANS Senate President, Akinteye Babatunde alleged it has come to attention of NANS that some Vice Chancellors were hatching plans that will undermine President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration’s noble objective of providing accessible education through the Student Loan Scheme. 

    He said: “This student loan scheme was meant to offer relief to students and their families by addressing the financial constraints faced by many Nigerian students in accessing quality education.”

    He lamented that instead of the VC’s working in harmony with the student loan initiative, they has chosen to pursue fee hikes that will inevitably discourage students from benefiting from the loan scheme. 

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    He stated that the planned increases are not only insensitive but also represent deliberate attempt to sabotage the future of Nigerian students.

    “We call on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to urgently investigate this anti-student agenda and take decisive action by sacking these Vice Chancellors who are determined to obstruct educational progress. 

    “Any such move to inflate fees under the guise of institutional development or financial constraints is unacceptable and will not be tolerated by the Nigerian student body.

    “We also call on all well-meaning Nigerians, parents, and education stakeholders to join us in resisting these oppressive and senseless fee increments. Education should be made affordable and accessible to all, not used as a tool for exploitation.

    “We remain committed to defending the interests of Nigerian students and ensuring that the Student Loan Scheme is successfully implemented without unnecessary hindrances.”

  • Reps promise effective implementation of students loan

    Reps promise effective implementation of students loan

    The House of Representatives yesterday promised to ensure an efficient implementation of the student loan and access to higher education programme of the Bola Tinubu administration.

    In a statement by its spokesman, Akintunde Rotimi, the House said in line with its Legislative Agenda on Social Sector Reform and Development (Agenda 5), it would continue to advocate for measures through legislation, oversight, and outreach to ensure access to quality education and improvements in the infrastructure of learning institutions.

    It also reaffirmed its commitment to the effective oversight and success of the student loan as government initiates the distribution of monthly stipends to students.

    The statement said recent updates through the House’s oversight mechanisms confirmed that NELFUND, under its Managing Director, Mr. Akintunde Sawyerr, had begun the disbursement of N20,000.00 monthly stipend for July to 20,371 students in six tertiary institutions.

    Rotimi said this was testament to the Federal Government’s commitment to breaking financial barriers in higher education.

    Read Also: NELFUND lists 6 institutions to receive students loan

    The spokesman said NELFUND was also working to extend the payment process to students from 55 more tertiary institutions in the coming weeks.

    Quoting the Chairman of the House Committee on Student Loan, Scholarship, and Higher Education Financing, Gboyega Isiaka (APC, Ogun), he said: “The operationalisation of NELFUND represents a significant step forward in our approach to educational support. It is designed to alleviate financial burdens, allowing students to focus on their academic endeavors.”

    Rotimi added: “To date, NELFUND has approved and disbursed over N2,530,235,750 in student loans, benefiting 22,120 students across 12 institutions. Approximately N2,026,163,340 has been disbursed as full payment of institutional fees to over 20,000 students in six institutions.”

  • AAUA VC lauds FG on students loan scheme, reiterates quality of Nigerian graduates

    AAUA VC lauds FG on students loan scheme, reiterates quality of Nigerian graduates

    The vice chancellor, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA), Prof Olugbenga Ige, has commended the President Bola Tinubu led federal government for approving to the student loan scheme. 

    He highlighted that the initiative would enable financially disadvantaged students to focus on their studies and excel.

    This is as the university administrator disagreed with the notion that quality of Nigerian graduates is low when compared with their foreign counterparts across the globe. 

    Prof Ige spoke at the weekend shortly after conducting the convocation for over 1,200 students of the Mufutau Lanihun College of Education, Ibadan an affiliate institution of AAUA.

    Noring that the current economic hardship is making learning difficult for many students, especially because of concerns of payment of school fees and other sundry charges in tertiary institutions across the country, the AAUA VC described the student loan scheme as the right step in the right direction.

    He said: “It is a welcome development. It is the right step in the right direction. You will find out that many students these days are dropping out of higher institutions due to high fees, because things are up and you need to maintain the standard of the institutions. 

    “Many students can no longer pay those high fees that most universities charge. Our university (AAUA) is moderate, in fact the lowest fees paying in this area, but there are some other universities that still charge high, yet people needs to be educated.

    “So, for the federal government led by President Bola Tinubu to think in that line, we give kudos to him because it is the right step in the right direction. It will help a lot of indigent students to acquire education and acquiring education is acquiring development for the country.”

    Speaking on the quality of Nigerian graduates, the Don said his sojour to many institutions of learning across the globe has revealed that many Nigerian graduates who go to other country for studies, especially post graduate programmes have always excel with ease because of the sound background from Nigeria.

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    “The quality of education in this country is high and excellent. I have travelled to various countries across the world and I have seen the quality of our graduates. Our Nigerian graduates lead other students in other countries when they travel there for their research, post graduate, Masters or even Doctorate. Our graduates from Nigeria always lead the pack in terms of excellence in their studies. 

    “So, for anyone to say that the quality of education in Nigeria is low, is not correct. I am very sure of that, our graduates are very okay and are excellently performing very well when they travel outside the country to obtain post graduate degrees in other institutions elsewhere in the world”, he added.

    He however appealled to the Federl government commit more to the sector by having quality institutions, manning it with quality personnel and quality infrastructures, adding that “when you have all these, research can go on and developement will come into the country. The moment you have very sound and quality research coming out of our universities and higher institutions, the level of development will improve. That I can assure you”.

    Addressing the new intake, he assured that the same quality, standard and certificate given to the students at the main campus will also be given to those from the Mufutau Lanihun College of Education, Ibadan as an affiliate of thr Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko. 

    He appealed to then to uphold and exhibit high moral standard with which the institution is known for, warning that any form of compromise would not be allowed if they must merit the certificate of the institution.

    Speaking earlier, the Provost, Mufutau Lanihun College of Education, Ibadan, Dr. Abiodun Gbolagade said the institution is one of the five approved by the National University Commission (NUC) to run as an affiliate.

    Noting that the College places premium on quality standard of capacity building, the Proost said the team is also ready for the accreditation exercise of the College by the NUC so as to be able to run full time programmes.

    Dr Gbolagade said: “Mufutau Lanihun College of Education is not a small fry when it comes to academic prowess or activities in Nigeria. At least we have spent almost 20years now, and we know that with our arrangements for the forthcoming accreditation, we won’t have any issue. We are prepared for them and all hands are on the deck to ensure that the visit and visitation panel of NUC is smooth.

    “It will be a good plus for Mufutau Lanihun College of Education running full time programmes, that will real help the students and the state. For the students, instead of travelling to Ondo state for their education, they can as well stay in Ibadan here, especially in the face of the security challenges. Although, we know that the President is trying but at least we still need to do more.

    “The purpose of bringing this institution here is just to help Governor Seyi Makinde in terms of promoting educational and economic development of the state. 

    “Out of all the affiliated campus in the country, only five have been picked by NUC and Mufutau Lanihun College of Education happens to be one of the best among the five, so it won’t be a shock if they are coming around and we are also waiting for them (NUC Accreditation team)”.

  • Students loan at last

    Students loan at last

    Tinubu replaces the ladder that wicked govt officials removed to deny the poor of educational opportunities

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on April 3 signed an executive bill titled “A Bill for an Act to repeal the Students Loans (Access to Higher Education) Act, 2023 and Enact the Student Loans (Access to Higher Education) Bill, 2024 to Establish the Nigerian Education Loan Fund as a body corporate to receive, manage and invest funds to provide loans to Nigerians for higher education, vocational training and skills acquisition and for related matters”.

    The President struck the appropriate chord at the occasion when he said that

    “This is to ensure that no one, no matter how poor their background is, is excluded from quality education and opportunity to build their future.” The ceremony took place at the State House, Abuja.

    Under the Students Loan Fund, interest-free loans would be given to eligible Nigerians for higher education.

    Ordinarily, this should not be news, not to talk of attracting the kind of attention that the occasion got in the media. In saner climes, students loan is routine. But this is Nigeria where governments either do not know their raison d’etre or simply do not care. They therefore leave undone those things that they should do and focus on things that they otherwise should have left undone.

    It is against this sickening background that President Tinubu signing the students loan bill becomes significant, if not historic. 

    Nigeria’s first attempt at such a facility was in 1972 when the Nigerian Students Loans Board was established. The board reportedly provided loans of about N46 million between 1973 and 1991 to help Nigerian students finance their university education, either in the country or abroad. Unfortunately the rate of loan recovery was low and this apparently killed the otherwise laudable scheme.

    But it needed not be so. Just that governments in this part of the world are characteristically lazy and corrupt. What needed to be done was to examine the template of the scheme to see the loopholes and plug them. Nigerians are not necessarily worse than most other nationals when it comes to loan repayment. The problem is that, unlike other nations, Nigeria does not have the necessary data with which to monitor loan defaulters.

    Until very recently, the country’s attempt at providing Nigerians with National Identity Number (NIN) had continually failed. This would have solved a lot of identity problems.

     Since the death of the 1972 loan scheme, I do not think there has been any genuine attempt at revamping the scheme until now.

    Therefore, we must commend the Tinubu administration for being this thoughtful. The idea of students loan was one of his campaign promises and it is praiseworthy that he is working assiduously toward making it a reality.

    The scheme would have taken off since last year but had to be postponed to fine-tune it in line with present realities and make its impact better felt by the beneficiaries and the country.

    Even in Nigeria’s golden era, there were different sources for students to get money and therefore have hitch-free academic pursuits. Some had both scholarships and loans, some had more than one scholarship, etc.

    I guess what many of us grew up to know were bursary awards that some state governments used to give to augment the resources of their students in tertiary institutions. At the University of Lagos where I graduated, students looked forward to their bursaries and everybody around knew that money was not the problem of the students but how to spend it when they had collected the bursaries. I never got bursary but that was by choice.

    But if ever there is a time that students need assistance to further their studies in Nigeria, it is now. What with the skyrocketing cost of living that has made things difficult for most people. Even the nouveau riche are also groaning under the present economic stress.

    Whenever I see what many of our university students are going through these days, I pity them because, even if my generation did not have the best of life in our university days, it was not completely bad. We still had something to write home about. One, we still looked forward to decent meals in our cafeterias for as cheap as 50 kobo per meal! A month’s meal ticket in the universities then was N45.00 (forty-five naira only!) On Sundays, we had jollof rice (I mean jollof rice, not concoction) and chicken to boot, for lunch. Nobody dared serve you chicken legs or other unworthy parts of the chicken. I was even luckier in my own case as I had already gotten used to that right from my Higher School Certificate days at the Federal School of Arts and Science, Ondo, where I did my ‘Advance Level’ programme. We were always served the same menu on Sundays.

    In other words, some of us still met the remnants of what our seniors enjoyed before the source of those good times dried up. My children and the children of many of my contemporaries always listened with awe whenever we tell these stories. They could never imagine that Nigeria was still talking about kobo as legal tender as recently as the late 1980s. Today, we do not even know what the kobo looks like because it cannot buy sweets or biscuits for babies.

    The wickedness in high places in Nigeria that I am trying to point out is that

    many of those who killed scholarship, bursary and loans to indigent Nigerians had life so easy in their own time in school. But, having got to the top, they removed the ladder, thereby denying others its use. The President alluded to the fact that those of them at the signing ceremony are in their respective positions because they were “helped” to get education: “We are here because we are all educated and were helped…”

     It was that ladder (read help) that Tinubu replaced on April 3.

    Education is the bedrock of development. Many other countries that we were together on the back bench of development a few decades ago have since moved forward and abandoned us to our fate. Our country is perhaps the place where the phrase ;’moving the country forward’ is parroted most in the world; but it has become a cliche because this is not from the heart of hearts of those saying it.

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    We have seen what lack of education can cause with the banditry, terrorism, etc. that we have been dealing with, especially in the northern part of the country. What is painful is that those who mortgaged the future of these youths who have been depriving others of their sleep in the name of culture and religion are still roaming the streets free, enjoying their ill-gotten wealth, while the entire country is paying the price of that elite that ate their youths’ future yesterday. This, for me, is the most painful aspect of it all.

    It is however gratifying that some of the states in the north seem to have realised the importance of education and are trying everything possible to encourage their children to go to school. The truth of the matter is that many of these children are brilliant; what they lack are opportunities to pass through the four walls of schools. They should be encouraged to join other parts of the country to take advantage of the students loan scheme.

     One can only imagine what would have been the fate of the numerous educated elites that the defunct Western Region produced if Chief Obafemi Awolowo had not introduced free education in the region. This is the kind of ‘help’ that Tinubu mentioned while signing the document. Yes, many parents in the region were, having known the value of western education, ready to do everything to send their children to school, even far back as that time. Some even sold their property because they knew that a child that was not educated would end up selling whatever property that is bequeathed to him (for peanuts). There is no time I write on this topic that I forget to recall the tribute that one of my seniors in the university, one ‘Perrow’ (not real name), paid to his parents in his final year thesis. He said he would forever be grateful to his parents ‘who gladly embraced poverty to give him Western education’. You may consider it an oxymoron, but that was what many parents literally did in the Western Region about five decades ago. Parents all over the country must buy this idea to lift the country from the abyss to greatness.

    I am happy that the new bill also provides for vocational training and skills development programmes. Not every child can make it to the university and not every child would be interested in tertiary or university education. That some children would not want tertiary education or cannot get it should not deprive them of realising their dreams.

    One other thing that gladdens my heart about this scheme is that it would mop up a lot of money that forms the basis of the humongous stealing in government. It is because there is a lot of idle funds in government coffers that people find it easy to steal in billions what should have been spent to provide services or infrastructure for Nigerians. This cannot be the case in a situation where government literally ‘scavenge’ for funds to finance their programmes and projects.

    Also, the terms and conditions for the loan seem satisfying. At least they addressed a lot of the inadequacies and fears of the earlier bill. For instance, family income threshold is no longer important, likewise guarantor; also, applicants may apply for loans to cover tuition and other fees payable to the school and maintenance allowance payable to the student, among other improvements on the previous iteration.

    But we all know that Nigeria is never bereft of good ideas. The problem has always had to do with implementation. That is my fear even on this loan scheme. I have a feeling that some criminals in the country would be getting ready to corrupt the process. I therefore urge the government to give the managing authority all the desired support to keep its data safe because that would be key to the success of the scheme.

    Moreover, revamping the economy must be the focus of government while security and power supply should also be improved upon. It is when all of these are done that jobs would be available and loan beneficiaries can be able to repay their loans, thus enhancing its revolving nature.

  • ‘Why Students Loan should be funded from Federation Account’

    ‘Why Students Loan should be funded from Federation Account’

    Funds for the implementation of the Students’ Loan should be drawn from the Federation Account, Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Muhammad Nami, suggested yesterday.

    He said this will allow every student to benefit from the loan.

    Speaking at a summit organised by the House of Representatives Committee on Students Loan, the FIRS boss said the parliament should amend the law to allow the one per cent revenue to be drawn from funds belonging to the three tiers of government instead of the federal government’s account only.

    House of Representatives Speaker Tajudeen Abbas assured that the House will address all issues to hampering the smooth implementation of the scheme.

    The loan, Abbas said is to promote equitable access to quality higher education for the Nigerian child.

    Represented by Deputy Speaker Benjamin Kalu, he described education as an integral part of the development, adding that no country can afford to toy with the future of its young ones.

    He said: “The legislature, as you know, plays a crucial role in providing access to quality education in the country. Our role in this regard is multifaceted. It involves enacting laws and policies that govern education, allocating resources, and overseeing the implementation of these policies and laws as well as the utilisation of appropriated funds.

    “Through these actions, the legislature contributes significantly to creating an enabling environment for quality education and ensuring that the right to education is upheld for all Nigerians. In this respect, the Student Loan Act is a transformational piece of legislation.

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    “This is quite critical given that education is considered a fundamental right in Nigeria. The legislature as custodians and defenders of citizens’ rights, play an essential role in safeguarding this right. This informed the initiation and passage of the Student Loan Act by the 9th House of Representatives.

    “The purpose was to create seamless access to credit facilities for quality higher education. The legislation finds its relevance in the recognition that one of the key barriers to accessing higher education is the high cost associated with tuition fees, accommodation, textbooks, and other educational expenses.”

    “Many talented and deserving students are unable to afford these costs, leading to a significant disparity in educational opportunities. As a result, we are witnessing a situation where only a privileged few can access quality higher education while the majority struggle to make ends meet contarily, we cannot afford to have majority of our citizens uneducated.

    “The Student Loan Act is a legislative framework designed to address the financial challenges faced by young Nigerians to accessing higher and quality education.

    “By accessing credit facilities, the Act aims to ensure that deserving students are not denied educational opportunities due to financial constraints.

    “It is feared that these conditions might hamper the good intentions of the legislature, which is to create access for as many Nigerians as possible who desire quality higher education.

    “It is due to this fact that the summit was convened to harness the opinions of stakeholders and experts on the improvement of the Act.”

    But Nami expressed concern about the one per cent federal government revenue meant for the funding and suggested that instead of federal allocation alone, the parliament should seek amendments that will allow the funding to be drawn from a federation account where all states can contribute too.

    President National Association of Nigerian Students, Usman Barambu, called for amendment to the student loan act to allow all students who desire loan to have access.

    They also asked the House to include student representation as well as Polytechnics  and Colleges of Education on the board of the scheme instead of only National University Commission (NUC) which was earlier captured.

    Barambu said criteria for accessing the loan in the current act was too stringent adding that the method of payment of two years was too short but should be reviewed to at least four to five years.

    JAMB Registrar Prof Is-haq Oloyede described the scheme as a turning point in the history of higher education in the 21st Century.

    He stressed the need to review the Act to cover cost of other things beyond school fees as students now pay more for accommodation, feeding and transportation.