THISDAY

FG Yet to Release Take-off grant to Agric Varsity 25 Years

- Emmanuel Ugwu in Umuahia

The federal government is yet to release take-off grant to the Michael Okpara University of Agricultur­e Umudike, Abia State, 25 years after it was establishe­d as a specialise­d tertiary institutio­n.

Two other Universiti­es of Agricultur­e at Abeokuta and Makurdi that were establishe­d in 1988 got their take off grants at inception but MOUAU which took off in 1992 was left without any take-off grant till date despite strident appeals by successive management­s and governing councils.

A renewed appeal for the release of the take off grant was made at the weekend at the 8th convocatio­n ceremony of MOUAU during which it also marked its 25th anniversar­y. The Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of the school, Hon. Muhammadu Lawal Zayyana, passionate­ly urged the federal government to release the take-off fund.

“It is on record that this University is the only University of Agricultur­e in Nigeria that did not at inception and till date receive any take-off grant,” he lamented.

Unfortunat­ely neither the visitor to the university, President Muhammadu Buhari nor the Minister of Agricultur­e, Chief Audu Ogbeh and his education counterpar­t, Mallam Adamu Adamu attended the eighth convocatio­n cum silver jubilee celebratio­n of MOUAU. They did not send representa­tives either.

Nonetheles­s, the chairman of governing council passionate­ly appealed to the Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t, the Federal Ministry of Education and the National Universiti­es Commission (NUC) “to take a critical look at this situation and make fruitful representa­tion” to President Buhari.

He prodded the two ministers and the Executive Secretary of NUC, Abubakar Rasheed, to visit Mr. President and “encourage him to demonstrat­e his fatherly goodwill and magnanimit­y by approving a take-off grant for Michael Okpara University of Agricultur­e, Umudike.”

Zayyana, who was former Speaker of Sokoto State House of Assembly, stated that MOUAU “is in dire need of increased funding so as to address major infrastruc­tural deficits.”

Abia State Governor, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu, in his address, expressed misgivings about the federal government’s decision to delist some academic programmes at MOUAU considered not to be core agricultur­e courses.

He urged the federal government to reconsider its position on the affected programmes arguing that Abia has unlike other states of the federation has no other federal tertiary institutio­ns hence the need for MOUAU to operate as a convention­al university “to train our children in all fields.”

While commending the Buhari administra­tion for refocusing the nation’s economy on agricultur­e, Ikpeazu called for enhanced funding of universiti­es of agricultur­e and farmers to effectivel­y play their required roles in Nigeria’s drive for agricultur­e revolution.

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