President GEJ |
In-line with the recommendations of the Stephen Oronsaye-led
Presidential Committee on the Rationalization and Restructuring of
Federal Government Parastatals, the Federal Government has apparently resolved to scrap some of its
agencies
The committee
had recommended the abolition of 38 agencies, the merger of 52 and the
reversion of 14 to departments in the ministries from which they were
carved out, a move the committee argued would save more than N862
billion between 2012 and 2015 if the government carried out what the
panel has proposed.
Among those scrapped are Unified Tertiary
Matriculation Examination (UMTE), National Examination Council (NECO),
Public Complaints Commission, National Poverty Eradication Programme
(NAPEP) and the Fiscal Mobilization and Allocation Commission among
others.
The sources revealed that with the scrapping of the UTME,
individual universities in the country would conduct their own
admission examinations and admit students while the Joint Admission and
Matriculation and Board will set and ensure compliance to standards as
it acts as the clearing house.
The
president has approved that the West African Examination Council
(WAEC) is now expected to take over the functions and vast
infrastructure of NECO which now ceases to exist.
This is to be modeled along the
line of Universities and Colleges Admission Service (UCAS), the central
organization through which applications are processed for entry into
higher education in the United Kingdom.
While confirming the
fate of UTME, a source volunteered that “individual university will do
their own examination and admission,” adding, “if you want to apply to a
university, you do so but in order not to have a situation where one
person gets multiple admission, JAMB acts a clearing house to free up
spaces. All the universities are free now to admit students.”
Even
though details were still being worked out, it was learnt that
government’s decision was informed by the need to promote merit in
admission into the nation’s universities because “the idea is to ensure
that the best students go to the best universities.”
The sources
confirmed that WAEC would now conduct two external examinations in a
year with one done in January while the second would be conducted in
November of every year.
The Public Complaints Commission is to
be merged with the Human Rights Commission just as NAPEP will also be
scrapped to be replaced with National Agency for Job Creation and
Empowerment.
It will be recalled that Oronsaye-led Presidential
Committee on the Rationalisation made far-reaching recommendations which
it explained were aimed at helping the government to effect a drastic
reduction in the size of its bloated bureaucracy, eliminating
duplication of functions and bringing down the cost of governance.
The committee submitted its report to the president in April last year.
Source: Nigerian Tribune
HBC: Hmmmm...I hope this won't be an avenue to lay off people in this harsh times and the N862 billion that will be saved by doing so, I pray they don't pocket it shaa...
Amin oo, c his head like agbalumo.
ReplyDeleteHmmm! Well in a country like ours where there is no accountability, we are almost 100% sure that the money which is supposed to be saved will still be hijacked. Till now we can not see any evidence of what the subsidy funds is being used for.
ReplyDeleteOkoye onyinye