The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) says poor and indigent students will not benefit from the students’ loan recently introduced by the Federal Government because of the conditions attached.
The Chairman of the University of Jos chapter of ASUU, Dr Mwolwus Jurbe, said this in Jos, the Plateau State capital, on Saturday.
Jurbe stated that the conditions attached to the loan were not for the children of the poor, who were supposed to be the target beneficiaries.
President Bola Tinubu had, in June, signed the Access to Higher Education Act, 2023, also known as the Students Loan Act.
The law would ensure the provision of interest-free education loans for Nigerians seeking tertiary education.
Some of the conditions include that students who wished to apply for the interest-free loan must first obtain admission into a public Nigerian university, polytechnic, College of Education, or Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) School.
The applicant’s income or family income must not exceed N500,000 per annum, and he/she must provide a minimum of two civil servants as guarantors.
The guarantors must either be at least on Level 12 in the civil service or a lawyer with at least 10 years of post-call experience, a judicial officer, or a Justice of Peace.
Students, or their parents, who have previously defaulted on loans, or have been found guilty of examination malpractices, felony, or drug offences would not be considered eligible for the loan.
Jurbe, however, said: “ASUU is a union that promotes equity and justice for all wants Nigerians to have equal opportunities at acquiring education, irrespective of social status.
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“Part of the reasons for our last strike is the revitalisation of the university system, but we received backlash from Nigerians.
“We believe that government can fund education; because federal and state governments spend huge amounts to send students abroad for studies.
“If this huge sum is harnessed into our education system, it will be the envy of many countries and foreign students will come here to study too.
“So, this loan will force parents to fund education, and it simply means that children of poor Nigerians can’t go to school.
“Any country that wants to make meaningful progress must also fund its education sector.”
The UNIJOS ASUU chairman, who also decried the spate of unemployment in the country, said most students who would access the loan may not be able to pay back within the stipulated time.
He added: “Giving bursary awards to Nigerian students is better than the provision of loans. This is because students may not be able to pay back the loan due to inadequate employment opportunities in the country.
“The fact remains that many jobless graduates that obtain such loans while in the higher institution would definitely become indebted to the government and unable to repay in time.
“Such policies thrive in the western countries like the United States of America, simply because there are job opportunities awaiting students even before they graduate from their various schools.
“But that is not the case in Nigeria, and we will not support the commercialisation of education because it it is a social good, and no one should be denied that on the basis of status.”
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