Friday, December 06, 2024 -The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has kicked against the federal government’s student loan program.
Recall that the loan is being administered through the Nigerian
Education Loan Fund.
ASUU President, Professor Emmanuel Osodeke said the introduction of
student loans has prompted higher institutions to hike tuition fees, making
education even less accessible for many Nigerians.
He stated this on Thursday when he appeared on Channels Television.
“Our issue with NELFUND is that in a country like Nigeria, it should be
grants; and not a loan.
“All the universities are increasing their fees now; jerking up their
fees so that the students will borrow more loans from this NELFUND, encumbering
the children of the poor.
“In my university, in my department, I now have less than 10 students in
the department, many have dropped out. Apart from some of these big courses
like Medicine, Law and what have you, students are dropping out. The children
of the poor are dropping out,” he said.
Osodeke explained that the student loan scheme had failed on two
occasions because students were not able to pay back upon graduation.
He explained many graduates may not get work because of the economic
situation of the country. He emphasized that the students may be morally
demoralized upon graduation.
“We are the academia, we do our research, we have searched all over the
world, we have not seen. In most countries where you are having student loans
when they graduate, they become problems in society. Some of them are
demoralized.
“Imagine a student graduating from the university with a loan of five
million naira. Even me as a professor, I can not pay back such a loan in 20
years’ time. Then student who graduates you have a loan of 5 million and you
are getting a job in next 20 years.
“And we are saying if you loot at what happened in the 60s and 70s you
can go to that level. The children of the poor assist them, increase budgetary
allocation to education and this issue of loan will not come out.
“This is the third time they are introducing it, the last two times it
collapsed, nobody benefitted. Those that benefitted didn’t pay back because it
collapsed. So how are we sure this one will survive?” Osodeke stated.
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