BY FESTUS OKOROMADU
The Federal Government said it has started working out modalities to start disbursement of students’ loan between September and October 2023.
The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education, David Adejo, disclosed this in Abuja on Wednesday while addressing newsmen on the recently signed bill by President Bola Tinubu.
The President had on Tuesday signed into law the Student Loan Bill in fulfillment of a promise he made during his campaign.
The student loan bill sponsored by the Speaker of the 9th House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, provides for interest-free loans to indigent Nigerian students.
Adejo said the law would provide easy access to higher education for indigent Nigerians through interest-free loans from the Nigerian Education Loan Fund.
The loan, he said, covers the loan students in private and public schools.
He said that Tinubu had also approved a committee made up of ministries and agencies to see to the fruition of the loan scheme.
According to him, “the bill is to make sure that every Nigerian has access to higher education through what we called the Higher Education Nigerian Bank.
“Learning from past mistakes, the bank is not going to be the type that will sit down and be collecting application loans.
“It will also perform normal banking functions and make sure loans are given because we had cases of loan recovery in the past.
“The Act as it is tells us the process, but as I speak with you today, the president has approved the committee made up of the ministries and agencies and their meeting will be coming up on June 20.
“The president has also directed that by September to October this 2023/2024 academic session, he wants to see recipients of these loans. So it is a very serious march for us so between now and then we have to phantom the process for people to get the loan,” he said.
The Permanent Secretary also said the government would create a specialised bank for the operation of the loans, noting that there would be a tracking system for efficient smooth running of the loans scheme.
He said this would cover both students in Private and public schools, adding that the government would also create a new bank for it.
“We are not going to use existing banks. We are going to create a new bank that will address this because we can’t use an existing bank.
“We don’t want to make it that only people who want to go to public schools will benefit from it, private schools are paying tuition so you have to give them the opportunity.
“The loan is for you to get an education programme and get employed, then you start paying back. The loan recovery does not start until you get employed.”