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Nigeria’s Education Minister Says 21,600 Students Parading Fake Degrees From Togo, Benin


(AFRICAN EXAMINER) – The Federal Government says no fewer than 21,600 students are parading fake certificates obtained from degree mills institutions in Benin Republic, Togo and others.

The Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, disclosed this during a ministerial press briefing on his one year achievements in the ministry, in Abuja on Friday.

According to Mamman, 1,105 students are holding fake certificates from Togo alone.

 The federal government in March set up an Inter-Ministerial Investigative Committee on Degree Certificate Milling, to probe the activities of certificate racketeers.

This followed an investigative report published by Daily Nigerian which exposed the activities of fake degree mills in the Benin Republic.

The Minister said that fake degrees from Nigerian and foreign universities would be flushed out of the system.

“The federal government has directed that the Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation (OHCSF) to issue circular to flush out anybody with fake certificates from these institutions.

“In Togo, there are three universities that are officially approved and licenced to offer degree courses and in Benin Republic, we have five institutions licenced for degree courses,” he said.

Speaking on the challenges of tertiary institutions in meeting their needs as a result the high electricity tariffs, Mamman said President Bola Tinubu had approved a long term solution of powering the institutions through CNG.

He added that in the last one year, the ministry had been able to return about four million out-of-school children back to school.

He said this was achieved  through the efforts of agencies under the ministry.

“Henceforth, on annual basis, we will be returning about four million out-of-school children back to school to address the menace.

“The Almajiri commission that was just established about a year ago is doing a lot in helping to return the out-of-school children back to school.

“In the last two weeks, through the Almajiri commission, about 20,000 students in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) have been registered to resume in the next academic session.

“This gesture will trickle down to other states and we are going to see to it that our children get back to school.

“We have also set up a committee with UNESCO and World Bank to review the existing policy for teachers’ support, welfare and development using the global best practices.

“By the time the government implement these policies in the next three years, the system of education would have been completed transformed,” the minister said.

On safety of students in the wake of the recent school collapse in Jos, Mamman pledged to collaborate with the Council for the Regulation of Engineering (COREN)  to check school facilities across the country.

He said that the step would go a long way in checking sharp practices by building contractors.

The minister disclosed that efforts are being made to meet the need of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), to avert their planned strike actions. (NAN)

 


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