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January 15, 2023 Akwa Ibom State Secondary Education Board Blames Boarding Fee Hike on Cost of Living

Akwa Ibom State Secondary Education Board Blames Boarding Fee Hike on Cost of Living

The state secondary education board in Akwa Ibom state has hinged the 100% increase in boarding fees on the current economic realities in the country.

Last week, some parents of students in Cornelia Connelly College, CCC, Afaha Oku had reached out to Inspiration Fm and expressed displeasure over the increase of boarding fees from 30,000 to 60,000 despite the free and compulsory education mantra being preached by the state government.

Speaking exclusively to Inspiration Fm’s education correspondent, UHUOTU OMILABU, executive chairman of the state secondary education board, Mrs. EKAETTE OKON insisted that the decision became necessary owing to how the economy has panned out recently.

“The economy is not just what it used to be, on a daily basis there is increment in terms of food and every other thing in the market, we find it difficult to continue running a boarding school with the money that parents and students were paying”

“I also want to draw your attention that the same parents that are complaining in our public schools are the same parents that send their children to private boarding schools. In some of these private boarding schools, their charges are about 350,000, 250,000 but here you find the state government pegging the price at 60,000, giving breakfast, lunch and dinner for 13 weeks.”

Mrs. EKAETTE further appealed to parents to applaud the efforts of the government in subsizing education in the state instead of complaining, saying that education cannot be totally free.

“There is no part of the world that education is totally free, that parents only produce children and send them to government schools and expect government to do everything. It’s not done anywhere in the entire world. Education is capital intensive.

“If these children are supposed to pay tuition fee, I am sure that it will not be anything less than a 100,000. Look at simple private nursery and primary school, a child in the crèche will pay up to 60,000 and then in nursery school some of them pay 140,000 and we are talking of secondary school and parents are complaining”

The increment in boarding fees cuts across all secondary schools in the state and does not cover for other items like sanitary tools that students are expected to bring along to school.

January 10, 2023 Fuel is Still Being Sold at a Loss -Sylva

Fuel is Still Being Sold at a Loss -Sylva

The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, said on Monday that Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited is selling Premium Motor Spirit, popularly called petrol, at a loss because of its mandate from the Federal Government as regards Subsidy.

The Minister addressed the issue as oil marketers stated that the supply hitches in the downstream oil sector that often leads to fuel scarcity, might persist till June, based on the government’s plan to end petrol subsidy in that month.

The petroleum minister spoke in Abuja at the resumption of the scorecard series (2015-2023) of President Muhammadu Buhari.

Last week, the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, said the Federal Government had budgeted about N3.6tn for fuel subsidy till June 2023.

Sylva, while speaking in Abuja on Monday, insisted that subsidy had been a burden, but stressed that it was a mandate on NNPC which had made the oil firm to continue selling PMS at a loss.

He said, “The management of the supply situation under this subsidy regime is not easy. We must all agree that so much money is being burnt in our cars, but somehow we have to put funds to continue to keep the country wet.

“Sometimes if you really think deeply you begin to wonder what magic we are doing to be able to keep this country wet consistently. Considering that you buy something, let’s say for N10, and you are to sell it at a loss.

“And then you are expected to go back to buy the same thing, and come back again to sell it at a loss. So at every point in time you are looking for more money to continue to buy it, because you’re mandated to sell it at a loss.”

Sylva added, “So if you are a businessman, look at it from this perspective, that you are now in the business where you are mandated to sell at a loss to the public. That is not an easy job, I must tell you.”

Respond in to a question on how he would feel when buying petrol at N300/litre, Sylva said he would not feel bad about it.

“If you ask me how I will feel as a private citizen to buy petrol at N300/litre, sadly, I will say I won’t feel bad, knowing the actual situation. And if you compare Nigeria to other countries, you will understand,” he stated.

The minister added, “When you convert the N300/litre that you are talking about to other currencies, then you will understand. A lot of you travel to the United Kingdom or the United States, how much do you buy petroleum products there? Even in Arab communities that produce crude oil.”

He said the cost of the commodity in Nigeria was not as high as what was obtained in other countries, but stressed that the current national consensus was that subsidy on petrol was no longer sustainable.

“Unfortunately we are still in a subsidised regime, which all of us know. As a country, I think it is a national consensus now that subsidy is not sustainable, but together we will get there,” Sylva stated.

He said until the cost of petroleum products were market driven, investors would continue to shy away from investing in the downstream oil sector.

“Under a subsidised regime, who is going to invest? If you build a refinery, how is your refinery going to make profit under a subsidised regime? But if you have a market-driven situation, you’ll see that a lot of investors will come.

“And the more refineries we have, this problem of access to petroleum products will be a thing of the past,” Sylva stated.

January 10, 2023 Wike Vows to Expose Corruption in NDDC

Wike Vows to Expose Corruption in NDDC

Rivers state governor, NYESOM WIKE has vowed to expose corruption in the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

 The governor said the NDDC has become a cash cow for politicians, adding that it is a shame that the NDDC superintends over the underdevelopment of the Niger Delta area and her people.

 Flagging-off construction of Elele internal roads in Ikwerre Local Government Area of the state, WIKE stressed that the people of the region have not felt any positive impact of the huge funds disbursed for the development of the area.

Governor WIKE challenged the new NDDC Chairman, LAURETTA ONOCHIE to judiciously utilise the new budget of the commission for the good of the people of the Niger Delta.

January 4, 2023 INEC Laments Poor PVC Collection Rate, Plans More Sensitization

INEC Laments Poor PVC Collection Rate, Plans More Sensitization

Atleast 6.7 million Nigerians are yet to collect their permanent voter cards (PVCs) as we get closer to the 2023 general elections.

Data obtained from the state offices of the Independent National Electoral Commission  revealed that 6.7 m PVCs were locked up in INEC safes across 17 states and the Federal Capital Territory.

INEC began the  the collection window for PVCs since December 12,2022 and to end on January 22.

The INEC National Commissioner for Information and Voter Education, Festus Okoye, disclosed in a statement that with effect from January 6 -15,2023  the collection of the PVCs will be devolved to the ward level after which collection would be moved to the local government areas.

The FCT has 460,643 uncollected PVCs as of December 24, while In Edo state, 661,783 voter cards have not been collected as of December 29. Ondo and Ekiti states accounted for  300,000 and 205,127 uncollected cards, respectively, as of December 15.

He explained that the collection of PVC is going on daily including Saturdays and Sundays (excluding public holidays) from 9am to 3pm at INEC offices across the 18 local government areas of the state.

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