State House, Bayelsa
|
|
The
cost of building many government houses in Nigeria is far higher than
what it takes to build many universities in the country with some state
houses gulping as high as nine times more than the cost of building a
university, Saturday PUNCH investigation has shown.
It
was also discovered that in many states where billions of naira were
expended on building bogus and expansive state houses for the first
families, universities owned by such state governments were in terrible
conditions.
In addition to this, many
programmes run by these state universities are yet to be accredited by
the National Universities Commission, the regulatory agency for
universities in Nigeria, due to lack of fund.
To
accredit a programme for study in any university in Nigeria, there are
minimum acceptable standards required by the NUC. They include
availability of adequate facilities to run the programme as well as
minimum number of staff both academic and non-academic.
A
former Executive Secretary of the NUC, Prof Peter Okebukola, said,
‘’The requirements are essentially facilities and staff. Both need money
to put in place. However, in the case of staff, a long-term investment
is needed to procure quality staff.’’
Depending
on the number of programmes to be accredited, accreditation of courses,
according to him, could gulp between N1.8bn and N2.7bn with
science-based courses gulping more money than non-science based courses.
But Saturday PUNCH
investigations showed that some states that could hardly afford to
spend as low as N800m on accreditation in their universities, spent
billions of naira to build state houses for their families.
In
Bayelsa State for instance, a Government House Complex named “The Glory
Land Castle” gulped at least N24bn. The edifice, located in the heart
of Yenagoa, the state capital, was initiated by former governors
Diepreye Alamieyeseigha and Timipre Sylva.
The
same state has begun the construction of a new Governor’s Office
project at Government House, Yenagoa, at a cost of N3.8bn according to
the state Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, Mr. Lawrence
Ewhrudjakpo.
Justifying the cost of
the project, he described the impressive edifice as one of the best in
Nigeria and West Africa with a captivating aesthetic ambience.
Paradoxically, there is high level of infrastructural decay at the Niger Delta University being run by the state government.
The
Chairman, Academic Staff Union of Universities, Niger Delta University
branch, Dr. Tuboukiye Sese, told one of our correspondents on the
telephone during the week that lack of infrastructure had been the
major problem of the university.
Sese
said, “Honestly, the state of infrastructure at NDU is nothing to write
home about. Successive administrations in the state have been neglecting
the school.
“When the incumbent
governor, Seriake Dickson, paid a visit to the university recently, he
saw things for himself. The structures in the permanent site of the
institution are those provided by TETFUND (Tertiary Education Trust
Fund). The governor then awarded contract worth N1.2bn. Unfortunately,
up till now, nothing has been done.
“In the university, internal roads are non-existent, office space is a sad development and student hostels are in poor state.”
He
lamented that due to absence of staff quarters, academic and
non-academic workers alike operate from Yenagoa, the state capital, a
journey of close to one hour.
Though
he could not be specific on the number of programmes in the university
that are yet to be accredited, he recalled that many of the university’s
programmes were not accredited during the last accreditation exercise.
He
said, “We lost quite a number of our programmes during accreditation.
This development is giving us cause for concern. As it is, many
lecturers risk losing their jobs because of the development as students
will not want to go to a school where most of their programmes are not
accredited.
“The state government
should help us in this direction. The university’s management is running
round the clock and using its initiative to ensure the de-accredited
courses are accredited.”
In the same
vein, the Kaduna State Government has just completed a N9.6bn new
Kaduna Government House/ Office Complex that was recently inaugurated by
President Goodluck Jonathan. The state Governor, Alhaji mukhtar Ramalan
Yero, said the project was executed in six phases.
But
shortly after the inauguration, medical students of Kaduna State
University stormed the street to protest the non-accreditation of the
institution’s medical courses by the NUC. They also protested poor
conditions at the Barau Dikko Specialist Hospital, which is supposed to
be the university’s teaching hospital.
The
protesting students lamented that the Faculty of Medicine started since
2008/09 academic session and none of the students had gone beyond 300
levels. According to them, the hospital’s ICU/dialysis centre has been
abandoned; the pathology laboratory is not supplied with equipment; and
all other works in various departments are moving at a very slow pace.
The
spokesperson for the Medical Students Association, Hassan Abu, who
called on the state government to address the problem urgently, said a
set of medical students had been transferred to Uganda to complete their
studies due to inadequate facility at the Barau Dikko Specialist
Hospital.
The story is similar in Akwa
Ibom State where the government constructed a State House with a sum of
N16bn and a Banquet Hall with 500 seating capacity with the sum of
N18bn. In other words, N34bn was spent on constructing a state house and
banquet hall, according to the state Commissioner for Special Duties,
Mr. Enobong Idem.
Saturday PUNCH investigations showed that the state government had not been funding the Akwa Ibom State University adequately.
It
was learnt that the state government only released N1.5bn for
construction projects, expansion and renovation of academic blocks,
including the acquisition of laboratory equipment in the university.
The
government was said to have set up a task force headed by the
Commissioner for Education, Prof Atim Antai, to execute the projects and
guarantee their timely completion.
The
NUC between July and August accredited only 11 courses in the
institution’s Faculty of Natural and Applied Sciences. Some of the
courses are Physics, Mathematics, Statistics, Chemistry, Computer
Science, and Geology. Others are Marine Biology, Biotechnology,
Microbiology, Botany and Zoology.
Apart
from the Faculty of Natural and Applied Sciences, the university also
runs courses in other faculties like Business Administration, Arts, and
Education, among others. But none of these other courses which are over
40 have been accredited.
While Delta
State Governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, in 2012 said his administration
would spend N6bn on the building of a new Government House, Ekiti State
former governor Kayode Fayemi borrowed N3.3bn to build a state house.
Both
governors justified the huge investment in building the state houses on
the need to build befitting edifices for their states. Uduaghan had
said, “The current Government House in Asaba has always been a temporary
arrangement, not a permanent feature. But we cannot continue to live in
a temporary accommodation. We have to do the right thing and do it
well.’’
But it was learnt that as of the time Fayemi spent N3.3bn on the state house, the state university was in terrible condition.
According
to the Student Union Government President of Ekiti State University,
Babatope Ibitola, the institution lacks basic laboratory equipment. He
said, “We still lack lecture theatres because the available ones are not
sufficient. Our core sciences lack laboratory apparatus except the
College of Medicine which is well equipped.” He appealed to the state
government to hasten the accreditation process of the college of
medicine.
Investigations by Saturday PUNCH
also showed that while it was convenient for states to budget billions
of naira to build state houses, governments did not make such bogus
budgetary allocations towards establishment of new universities.
For
instance, the Federal Government provided just N2bn, about a quarter of
what should ordinarily be needed, for the take-off of each of the nine
universities it established three years ago.
President
Goodluck Jonathan approved N18bn for the nine universities. The sum was
among others to assist them in developing their campuses as well as
providing administrative blocks, libraries and Information
Communications Technology centres. The nine federal universities are
located in Jigawa, Katsina, Gombe, Nasarawa, Kogi, Ebonyi, Bayelsa,
Ekiti and Taraba states.
Providing
insight into what it would cost to establish a new university, the
Registrar, Elizade University, Ilara-Mokin, Mr. Omololu Adegbenro, said a
minimum of N7bn is required to establish a standard university in
Nigeria.
According to him, one of the
NUC’s demands from promoters of private universities is that they must
have 102 hectares of land. Adegbenro said, “This alone is expensive to
acquire. Even if you are starting with two faculties, you will need to
construct the faculty buildings. You need at least two halls of
residence for the students; one for female and one for male.
“You
will also need to build a cafeteria, a library, administrative complex,
banking halls, road networks and provide Information Technology
facilities, among others. These are huge projects and that is why you
need a minimum of N7bn to set up a good private university in Nigeria.
“You
will also need to start with at least four professors; the principal
officers and other personnel are also there. The NUC also requires that
you must have at least N500m in your account before takeoff.”
A
former NUC Executive Secretary, Prof. Peter Okebukola, said though
there was no minimum amount specified in the commission’s guidelines for
setting up a standard university, there are minimum facilities and
human resources that should be available before a university is
licensed.
According to him, the
minimum amount to set up a university can be estimated from the cost of
such facilities and resources. He said the amount was N3bn in 2003, but
it is about N5.5bn now.
He, however,
said Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State; Landmark University,
Omu-Aran, Kwara State; American University of Nigeria, Yola, Adamawa
State; and Afe Babalola University had a cost range of between N7bn and
N12bn at take-off.
The former NUC executive secretary, however, said it would cost more to accredit science-based courses than non-science courses.
He
said, “If we have an admixture of the two which is the typical scenario
in most universities, the cost can range between N1.8bn and N2.7bn if
the programmes are to be elevated from the denied status.
“In
2004, Kogi State University spent about N900m to get about 20 of its
programmes re-accredited. In 2014, a number of universities seeking
re-accreditation for about 20 courses are asking their proprietors for
about N1.5bn.”
Okebukola, however,
blamed the governors’ preference for luxury at the expense of investment
in education on members of their state Houses of Assembly who approved
money for giant Government Houses.
He
said, “Education is a potent tool for fast-paced development and
investment in the sector should never be made secondary to luxury. No
governor will start using tax payers’ money to build a giant Government
House without approval by members of his state House of Assembly who are
the representatives of the people.
“The
greater concern is not the governor who spends the people’s money on a
structure in his state, but those who steal the money to build giant
structures in Dubai, the United Kingdom, the United States and South
Africa, among others.’’
The Dean,
Faculty of Education, University of Lagos, Prof. (Mrs.) Mopelola
Omoegun, said, “According to the NUC, it will cost a minimum of N9bn
to build a standard university in the country and I think it is not fair
for governors to spend almost same amount to build their lodges.
“The
state of education in this country will continue to fall if there is no
adequate funding. We have been talking about this all the time. What is
the root of the falling standard of education? It is inadequate
funding. There is need for adequate funding. If our governors will play
their politics right, they have to fund this sector well even if they
have to sacrifice their comfort for the benefit of all. They should make
it viable.
“Some of the state
institutions are the direct victims of this menace. That is why it may
be difficult to even establish new higher institutions in such states.
To all the governors, provide facilities and funds, and we will get the
results we want,” she added.
Also, an
Abuja-based lawyer and social commentator, Mr. Jide Oluyemi, said it was
still unacceptable for a state government to spend billions of naira on
building one Government House when the Federal Government gave each of
the nine newly established universities N2bn as take-off grant.
No comments:
Post a Comment