President Bola Tinubu, on Wednesday, handed the Student Loans (Access to Higher Education) Act (Repeal and Re-Enactment) Bill, 2024, into legislation.
This comes after separate concerns by each the Senate and the House of Representatives of the report of the Committee on Tertiary Institutions and TETFund.
Speaking after he signed the invoice, Tinubu stated no Nigerian, no matter their background, might be excluded from acquiring high quality training.
“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,” stated the President on the State House, Abuja.
The government invoice 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, 2004 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” was signed within the presence of the management of the National Assembly, Ministers and Major Stakeholders of Education.
This adopted separate concerns by each the Senate and the House of Representatives of the report of the Committee on Tertiary Institutions and TETFund.
Tinubu thanked the National Assembly for contemplating the piece of laws speedily, affirming that the administration is set to extend the talent ranges of Nigerians.
He stated, “I’ve simply signed a invoice proclaiming the coed mortgage successfully. First of all, I need to thank members of the National Assembly for his or her expeditious dealing with of this invoice contemplating the kids of Nigeria, that training is the instrument to battle towards poverty successfully.
“We are decided to make sure that training is given the correct consideration mandatory for the nation together with abilities improvement programmes.
“We are here because we are all educated and were helped. In the past, we have seen a lot of our children dropped out of colleges and given up the opportunity. That is no more, the standard and the control is there for you to apply no matter who you are as long as you are a Nigerian citizen.”
On June 12, 2023, Tinubu signed the Access to Higher Education Act, 2023 into legislation to allow indigent college students to entry interest-free loans for his or her academic pursuits in any Nigerian tertiary establishment.
The transfer was in “fulfillment of one of his campaign promises to liberalise funding of education,” a member of the then Presidential Strategy Team, Dele Alake, stated.
The Act, popularly generally known as the Students Loan Law, additionally established the Nigerian Education Loan Fund to course of all mortgage requests, grants, disbursement, and restoration.
Although the federal government initially introduced that the scheme might be launched in September, it suffered a number of delays resulting in an indefinite postponement in early March.
The Presidency had linked the delay to Tinubu’s directive to broaden the scheme to incorporate loans for vocational abilities.
After receiving briefing from the NELFUND staff led by the Minister of State for Education, Dr Yusuf Sununu, on January 22, the President had directed the Fund to increase interest-free loans to Nigerian college students considering skill-development programmes.
Tinubu primarily based his resolution on the necessity for the scheme to accommodate those that could not wish to pursue a college training, noting that talent acquisition is as important as acquiring undergraduate and graduate tutorial {qualifications}.
“This shouldn’t be an unique programme. It is catering to all of our younger individuals. Young Nigerians are gifted in several areas.
“This shouldn’t be solely for many who wish to be medical doctors, attorneys, and accountants. It can be for many who aspire to make use of their expert and educated palms to construct our nation.
“In accordance with this, I have instructed NELFUND to explore all opportunities to inculcate skill-development programmes because not everybody wants to go through a full university education,” he had stated.