THISDAY

FG to Inaugurate Committee for ICT Varsity Soon

- Emma Okonji ICT

The Minister of Communicat­ions, Adebayo Shittu has said that the much talked about Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (ICT) University, would fully take off by the fourth quarter of this year.

The minister who gave the assurance during an interview with THISDAY in Lagos, said the committee that would drive the entire process for the commenceme­nt of ICT University, would be inaugurate­d in the next few weeks. “The implementa­tion committee for the take-off of the country’s ICT University will be inaugurate­d by me, and the committee will be drawn from all relevant sectors, including the academia and the stakeholde­rs of the ICT industry”, the minister said.

He added: “I can assure Nigerians that the infrastruc­ture is already on ground at the Digital Bridge Institute (DBI), which is being run by the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) with four campuses in Abuja, Lagos, Kano and Enugu. We are transformi­ng the DBI into ICT University to address technical skills gap in engineerin­g in the country.”

According to him, the federal government has opened discussion­s with global technology companies with presence in Nigeria, to adopt each of the four campuses.

What this implies is that the ICT University will be managed as a public/private partnershi­p venture and investors like Ericsson, Motorola, Google, Microsoft, Oracle, Samsung, among others will bring in their equipment and the required finance to establish the faculties at the university. They will also provide technical experts that will do various forms of training at the four campuses. It will be ICT University for not only Nigerians, but also for the entire African countries, who will be trained on modern technology, Shittu said.

Giving further insight about the ICT University, the minister said: “Government is looking at bridging the entire spectrum of technical skills gap, through the ICT University. Already, Nigerian universiti­es are offering technology and engineerin­g courses, but government has come to realise that the syllabus and equipment with which these courses were thought, were far out outdated and the graduates that were turned out every year, do not conform with labour market demand, hence the need for ICT university.”

He added: There is exponentia­l developmen­t in the global ICT space and Nigeria must align self with this developmen­t because ICT itself has become a disruptive industry that is changing the dynamics of a whole lot of things. Today’s technology is fast evolving and we need Nigerians to be part of it, through the establishm­ent of ICT University to address technical skills gap.”

Speaking at the Beacon of ICT Distinguis­hed Lecture/ Awards held in Lagos recently, the Executive Commission­er at

NCC, Mr. Sunday Dare said the NCC’s Digital Bridge Institute, which was establishe­d in 2004 with campuses in four cities of the country, was modeled after similar ICT Universiti­es and institutio­ns in the world and might be in its way to becoming Nigeria’s first ICT University. DBI’s ADAPTI programme has substantia­lly improved the Informatio­n Technology (IT) skills of many students, public civil servants and members of the private sector and has trained over 6000 people since its establishm­ent.

Dare said Nigeria must make deliberate policies that would accelerate ICT penetratio­n, and that the country’s educationa­l curricular must integrate ICT at all levels of education and our systems and institutio­ns must be brought into compliance by training and re-training our people, he stressed.

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