THISDAY

30,000 Students Benefit from Ogun Educash Transfer, Says Commission­er

- James Sowole

The Ogun State Government has said that no fewer than 20,000 students in tertiary institutio­ns across the country have so far benefited from the ongoing Educash transfer of N50,000 to cushion the current economic crisis.

In the same vein, it stated that 10,000 indigent students in both primary and secondary schools across the state, have also benefitted from the N10,000 cash transfer.

This was disclosed by the Commission­er for Education, Science and Technology, Prof Abayomi Arigbabu, after monitoring the cash transfer to public primary and secondary schools at the Ogun West Senatorial District .

According to the commission­er, by the end of next week, more students would have benefited from the gesture at both the tertiary and secondary/primary levels, even as he promised that all students captured would be paid.

He said: "I can tell you that for the one of the tertiary institutio­ns, we have done 20,000 as at today, and the total for the tertiary institutio­n beneficiar­ies is a little bit less than 50,000. Hopefully, by the end of next week, we will have reached half of that, which is about 25,000 beneficiar­ies.

"I want to assure those who have not received theirs, for instance, Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), a list of a little bit over 12,000 was sent to us. As we speak now, we have paid just a little less than 6,000.

“The same thing at Tai Solarin University of Education (TASUED), where we have a little bit less than 8,000. We have tried to make sure we are targeting between the range of 45 per cent to 50 per cent in all the schools," he said.

Arigbabu also said that the state government would not entertain cash payment during the ongoing exercise to students in public primary and secondary schools.

He noted that the government would still avail any parent without a bank account an opportunit­y to do so as long as they have already been captured for the educash payment.

"We are not going to pay cash to anybody; we are not going to handle cash. We are going to pay through the account. If that person doesn't have an account, they need to open an account because it is difficult to trace cash transactio­ns.

"Today, as we have gone out, if I say I have paid 100 people, how will you confirm that? But, the one we have done through transfers, you can see it through bank statements and the alerts they receive.

"We want to avoid anything that will make us pay cash. We won't even pay cash, I can assure you.

"Those who have not opened account, if the name was captured and sent to us, that is for primary and secondary beneficiar­ies, what we can do for that person is to allow him or her to open a bank account and send the details to us.

"For parents whose children were selected in the primary and secondary as a result of indigence, we will look into that particular case. If we have a parent that has no account, we will allow him/her to open an account and send it to us," he said

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