September 10, 2013 by Sunday Aborisade, Abuja 3 Comments
Former
British Prime Minister, Mr. Gordon Brown, said on Monday in Abuja that
Nigeria would benefit from a pool of $500m fund targeted at boosting
educational development in the country.
The fund, he added, would also serve as
additional resources to support the development of the Universal Basic
Education in Nigeria.
Brown stated this at the meeting of the
Coalition Interventions to support access and quality of education in
Nigeria hosted by President Goodluck Jonathan at the State House in
Abuja.
He said, “The Federal Government of
Nigeria has made available $250m for investment in education. What we
have managed to do by talking to the individual agencies over the last
few days is to match that $250m by the additional $250m thus making
possible new investment of $500m in education in Nigeria.”
A breakdown of the fund as stated by
Brown indicated that Global Partnership for Education and the United
States Agency for International Development, had agreed to contribute
$100m every year, for the development of universal education.
Brown said the Federal Government in
collaboration with state governments, had already provided $250m for the
development of education in the country.
He added that the additional cash
transfers would be for training, and the introduction of new
technologies that would match the initiatives that had been attracted by
Alhaji Aliko Dangote, from the business community.
He added that “Nigeria stands to benefit
from a seven-year term European Union grant that will be devoted to the
development of education.
“I have talked to the head of the
development commission for the European Union and he said he would tell
the government of Nigeria to submit an application from time to time
for the next seven years, the term that will be devoted to education
development in Nigeria.”
Brown added that he also sought further
assistance on behalf of Nigeria from the head of Department for
International Development, who according to him, said that he would be
happy to entertain new application for private support of additional
cash transfers from the individual states.
He also promised that he would visit
Nigeria in January and would want to meet states that were interested in
moving the new innovation forward.
Speaking on behalf of Jonathan on the
occasion, Vice President Namadi Sambo, said that the Federal Government
had identified access and quality “as the two strategic goals for the
four-year Strategic Plan for the Education Sector 2011-2015.”
No comments:
Post a Comment