The Guardian (Nigeria)

Terseer missing hard facts

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… Universiti­es that work proactivel­y in developing and sustaining internatio­nal recruitmen­t, networks, and strategies can expect their students to be more highly valued by multinatio­nal employers, who value a broadness of experience and intercultu­ral awareness - Martins Oloja.

IR: Honourable Terseer Ugbor, a graduate of Sociology and Anthropolo­gy from a tuition free University of Abuja was explaining how he has travelled far and near, local and abroad, collecting facts on how best to institute and sustain students loan board and how it will institute discipline in admission process in Nigerian universiti­es where 80 per cent of the students are pursuing courses in the social sciences, like he did, which is not relevant to Nigerian economy.

What is worst, he castigated Federal Government for spending about N1 trillion yearly in paying lecturers’ salary, claiming that infrastruc­ture has been taken care of by the Tertiary Education Trust Fund ( TETFUND) ; hence, only the students are left on their own hence his committee advocates one per cent of all revenues earned by customs and other revenue gen

Serating organisati­ons to populate the students loan’s fund so as to help students to be well- off in terms of managing their future.

Another policy cul- de- sac subsidy removal palliative.

I am very sure, a great Akokite like Maupe interviewi­ng him on Channels “Hard Facts” would wonder if the Honourable is truly a representa­tive of the poor masses in Benue who are hounded by people who are lacking in humanistic education; and whose agricultur­al endowment had been destroyed by lack of the basics – good background knowledge of Arts and Humanities that places human beings and their welfare as the greatest motivation that drives all knowledge and developmen­t, science inclusive.

What is more, Terseer fails to apply his knowledge of anthropolo­gy and sociology to detect why almost 80 per cent of the pure science graduates are doing the works of graduates of Humanities; as structural­ly, leaders like him fail to map out developmen­t plans that can sustain employabil­ity of pure science students for almost 30 years period upon which they could earn enough to develop entreprene­urial abilities alongside their science knowledge for further agro- industrial expansion that could make them more valuable for a state like like

Benue – the food basket of Nigeria.

Again, it has just been announced by Jeune Afrique that over $ 660 billion Diaspora remittance has been recorded in the world in 2023 and Africa’s share is about 15 per cent with Nigeria taking up 39 per cent of the Africa’s 15 per cent.

They are mostly the earnings of Nigerians well educated with subsidised lecturer’s pay in Nigeria, who are found worthy of employment in mostly service industries or hospitalit­y industries in the West or even menial jobs that required well behaved candidates, as Nigerians remain well behaved as a result of the Arts and Humanities’ education qualificat­ions they have acquired and that make them behave well for employers to find them suitable and for them to be so loyal as to remit what all of us in Nigeria cannot put up as Nigeria’s annual budget, just N23 trillion compared to over $ 30 billion amounting to over N30 trillion Diaspora remittance.

Only United Kingdom recorded over 140,000 Nigerians who migrated since last year. They are mostly graduates of Humanities though some are medical science graduates.

• Victor C. Ariole is a professor of French and Francophon­e Studies, University of Lagos.

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