Minister of
Education, Adamu Adamu
|
The National Parents and
Teachers Association of the Federal Government Colleges has protested against
the increase in the school fees of unity schools by the Federal Government,
describing it as “commercialization of education.”
The
organization warned that the new fees, if not reversed, would force parents to
withdraw their children from the unity colleges.
The
association in a communiqué read to journalists by its National President, Dr.
Gabriel Nnaji, at the end of its National Executive Council meeting, said the
increment from ₦20,000 to ₦75,000 was untimely and insensitive by the
government.
According
to him, the fee was increased on June 1 by the government.
The
communiqué partly read, “The increase of school fees from about ₦20,000 to
about ₦75,000 in unity colleges is most untimely and insensitive. An average
Nigerian worker whose minimum wage is ₦18,000 and who has one or two children
in the unity colleges will be unable to keep his or her child or children in
the unity colleges.
“The
recent increase is a negation of the policy or principle that established unity
colleges which is to make basic and secondary education affordable and
accessible to an average Nigerian student.”
The
association therefore appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari and the members of
the National Assembly to compel the Federal Ministry of Education to revert to
the old fee regime “as the education of Nigerian children is a right and not a
privilege.”
“The
association will continue to partner the Federal Ministry of Education by
complementing the efforts of the ministry in the provision of basic facilities
in the unity colleges,” Nnaji said.
According
to him, while NAPTAFEGC appreciated the Federal Ministry of Education in making
the payment of insurance levy in the unity colleges optional, the association
frowns on any attempt to commercialize or make the cost of training Nigerian
children in the unity colleges beyond the rich of an average Nigerian parent.
He
said, “Enough budgetary provision should be adequately made and very timely
released to the unity colleges to enable students to continue to compete very
favourably with students of other academically sound private colleges.
“The issue of security in unity colleges must be given the deserved attention and commitment all the time. Students who have paid for books should always be made to receive them in good time and not when they are no longer needed.”
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