Following
the recommendations of the presidential committee on the
rationalisation and restructuring of its parastatals, headed by Mr.
Stephen Oronsaye, the federal government has finally approved the
scrapping of some of its agencies.
LEADERSHIP can authoritatively reveal that the agencies pencilled
down to be scrapped include the Unified Tertiary Matriculation
Examination (UMTE), National Examinations Council (NECO), Public
Complaints Commission, and National Poverty Eradication Programme
(NAPEP), among others.
Dependable sources close to the committee confirmed that the decision was taken at a meeting
between President Goodluck Jonathan, Vice President Namadi Sambo and
some presidential aides, who met twice at the presidential villa. They
were said to have acted based on the advice of the White Paper Committee
set up by the president to look into the report.
The Orosanye-led committee had in its recommendation, which it
presented to the president in April last year, asked Jonathan to scrap
38 agencies, merge 52 and the revert 14 others to departments in the
ministries from which they were created.
It said this was in response for calls by Nigerians to cut cost of
governance as it will save the country over N862billion between 2012 and
2015 and eliminate duplication of functions.
Also, the Public Complaints Commission, it was learnt, is to be
merged with the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) , while NAPEP
will also be scrapped and be replaced the National Agency for Job Creation and Empowerment.
One of the sources who spoke to LEADERSHIP on condition of anonymity
last night revealed that Jonathan had also, at the meeting, approved
that the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) should take over the
functions, including all infrastructure, of NECO which ceases to exist
henceforth.
The source said, “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 scrapping of the UTME, he added, would entail that every
university in the country would now conduct their own admission
examinations for students, while the Joint Admissions and Matriculation
Board (JAMB) will act as regulating body and the clearing house in
ensuring compliance to standards.
The source said: “The process will be modelled along the line of
Universities and Colleges Admission Service (UCAS), the central
organisation through which applications are processed for entry to
higher education in the United Kingdom.
“Individual university will now do its own examinations and
admissions. If you want to apply to a university, you do so but in order
not to have a situation where one person gets multiple admissions, JAMB
acts a clearing house to free up spaces. All the universities are free
now to admit students.”
LEADERSHIP also gathered that, worried over the system’s inability to
promote merit when admitting applicants into the universities in the
country, government had no choice but to take the action with a view to
“ensure that the best students go to the best universities.”
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