Saturday, August 16, 2025 -The Management of the Industrial Training Fund (ITF), has refuted rumours of a proposed plan to relocate the agency’s headquarters from Jos, the Plateau State capital, to another state, saying there are no such plans now or in the future.
A member of the Plateau State House of Assembly, Hon. Prof.
Theodore Bala Maiyaki (SAN), had, during plenary on Thursday, raised a motion
under a Matter of Urgent Public Importance, calling the attention of the
Assembly to alleged plans to relocate the ITF headquarters from Jos.
In the motion, Maiyaki urged the state and the Federal
Governments, as well as relevant authorities, to immediately halt any plan to
move the agency’s headquarters from the state capital, with a warning that such
a move would have far-reaching socio-economic and historical consequences for
the state.
But while reacting to the report, the agency, in a statement
by its Head of Press and Public Relations, Thomas Ngor, debunked the claims,
saying the motion was unnecessarily alarmist and based on false information
with the risk of harming the cordial and harmonious relationship that had
historically existed between the ITF and the people of the state.
In the statement, Ngor said that though the agency
appreciates the efforts of the lawmaker to represent his constituency and
Plateau State as required by his office, his motion, which was without concrete
facts, could cause potential ill-will and disaffection as there is no proposed
relocation of the ITF headquarters from Jos.
The statement noted that the relocation of agencies involves
several processes, and thus far, none of them have been contemplated by the
responsible authorities within the ITF, critical to such decisions.
It stressed that neither the management, the Governing
Council of the ITF, nor the supervising Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade,
and Investment, which is responsible for running the agency, had considered any
speculated relocation.
Ngor stated that on the contrary, the ITF values its
long-standing historical ties and socio-economic contributions to Plateau
State, which have been integral to its identity since 1976, when the Fund’s
headquarters was relocated from Lagos to Jos.
“The ITF remains committed to fostering industrial and
economic growth in Plateau State and Nigeria, with Jos as the central hub for
its operations in the foreseeable future.
“The Fund welcomes dialogue with the state government and
relevant stakeholders to address concerns and strengthen collaborative efforts
for mutual benefit.
“In light of the above, the ITF reaffirms its commitment to
its heritage and responsibilities in Jos and urges the public to disregard
rumours of relocation as unfounded and misleading,” Ngor emphasized.
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