The Vice chancellor of University not Port Harcourt has bemoaned the
poor state of the nation’s economy and warned that except public
universities are allowed to increase school fees, they may soon collapse
due to poor funding.
He stated this during the press briefing in view of the institutions 30th Convocation Ceremony.
According
to him, the critically needed funding for institutions by the
government is dwindling by the day, in the face of failing oil prices,
while the average cost of running each university is correspondingly
escalating by the day.
“The truth is that statutory federal
allocations alone can no longer be relied upon to run the universities
as little or nothing is left to embark on meaningful research and
infrastructural development after payment of salaries. As I have always
maintained, the plain truth is that we can no longer shy away from
giving serious consideration to the issue of introducing some form of
school fees (or charges) in the Nigerian university system, if we hope
to dig it out of the deep morass into which years of unrealistic
tuition-free education has placed it.”
In his opinion parents
should pay a little more to sustain the Nigerian university system if
they still hope to see public universities in the next 10 years; adding
that some Nigerians were prepared to pay huge sums to sustain quality
education in other countries, and yet treat the ones here with utter
contempt.
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