The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday
approved a reduction in the cost of obtaining Joint Admissions and
Matriculation Board (JAMB) application forms from N5, 000 to N3, 500, starting
from January 2019.
The FEC meeting, presided over by Vice President Yemi
Osinbajo also announced a cut in the cost of Senior Secondary Certificate
Examination (SSCE) organised by National Examination Council (NECO) from 11,
350 to N9, 850 and that Basic Education Certificate handled by NECO would now
be N4, 000 as against N5, 500.
Following the announcement by JAMB that it remitted
N7.8billion as proceeds from sales of Unified Tertiary Examinations (UTME)
application forms in 2017, the House of Representatives in May 2018 tasked the
Federal Ministry of Education to reduce the cost of JAMB forms.
The lawmakers warned JAMB against becoming a
revenue generating body at the expense of students (applicants).
Briefing State House correspondents after the FEC
meeting that last over three hours, the Minister of Education, Mr. Adamu Adamu, said the reduction is as a
result of the pleas from parents.
According to him, “Since the new administration
came into office as well as a change in management and prudent management by
JAMB, we have been able to see that most of what have been charged doesn’t have
to be because a lot of it have been siphoned by corrupt officials.
“So, in yielding to parents’ plea, the president
directed that we should look into the possibility of reducing the charges.
“So, accordingly, from January 2019, JAMB fees will
be reduced from N5, 000 to N3, 500 for UTME; Senior Secondary Certificate Examination
charge organised by National Examination Council (NECO) will reduce from 11,
350 to N9, 850 while Basic Education Certificate handled by NECO is reduced
from N5, 500 to N4, 000.
“As I said, our concern is not to make money as
such because we are not a revenue generating agency. Since we found that JAMB
has been able to bring into government coffers about N8 billion, we said we
should reduce the burdens on parents.”
Asked if the reduction was a move to woo electorate
ahead of 2019 presidential election, Adamu said the underlying factor is that
the people must feel good impacts of the government.
“A good thing doesn’t have to have a reason.
Whether it is because of election or not, I think parents deserve to have the
fees reduced. And I think there is no better time to do a good thing than
now," he said.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and
Publicity, Femi Adesina, said the Council also approved 11 ecological
interventions projects for N9, 600, 415, 324 in Lagos, Oyo, Ondo, Cross River,
Adamawa, Bauchi, Jigawa, Niger ABU Zaria, Kaduna States and Abuja.
He said the projects are spread in Lagos - jetty
and shoreline protection facilities; flood and erosion control in Oyo town, Oyo
State; erosion control of flooded areas/road improvement in Owo, Ondo State;
erosion control of flooded areas in Akampa, Cross River; road and stem water
defiance in Federal College of Education in Yola, Adamawa State; road and
bridges at Dutse Saki village in Buguru Local Government Area in Bauchi State;
erosion control at Kazaure in Jigawa State; intervention at Main Campus Phase
II Site at Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, Kaduna State; erosion and flood
control at Kontagunra council area of Niger State; gully erosion and road
improvement at Army Post Service Estate, Kurudu, Abuja and erosion and flood
control at Asharawa area council in Phase II, Abuja.
The president's spokesman also said the council
also approved three industrial wastes combined incinerators for environmental-friendly
destruction of counterfeit and substandard regulated products. It was approved
for NAFDEC at the sum of N267, 585, 160.
The FEC meeting also approved the business plan for
ECOWAS Biometric Cards intended to replace the current ECOWAS Travel
Certificate. It is a contractor-financed project that will cost N14.7billion.
Minister of the Interior, Abdurahman Dambazzau,
told journalists that the project was according to a recommendation of West
African regional leaders since 2016 because the ECOWAS travel papers could
easily be faked.
Dambazzau said biometric cards are expected to be
issued to about 13 million persons over the next 19 years.
He said in order to make it easier for Nigeria, the
project would incorporate the National Identity Number (NIN). It is hoped that
the new cards will help safeguard Nigeria's borders.
In his take, the Minister of State for Power, Works
and Housing, Sulaiman Hassan, said the council approved two memos. “The first
one is the furnishing of the federal secretariat complexes in three states of
the federation, Akwa in Anambra, Gusau in Zamfara and Yenagoa in Bayelsa at the
cost of N3.48 billion.
“It is the duty of the federal ministry Power,
Works and Housing to provide decent accommodation for federal agencies and
other offices in various states of the federation to make their workings easier
and more comfortable for better results.
“So these complexes have been completed and ready for
inauguration before the end of the year,” he noted.
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