The World Bank has released the first tranche of payment, totalling
N1.4bn, to 10 Nigerian universities listed among the African Centres of
Excellence.
The fund is for the ACE project to shore up the ranking of the
universities in agriculture, health, science, technology, engineering
and mathematics.
The Executive Secretary of National Universities Commission, Prof.
Julius Okojie, who said this at the ACE project post-effectiveness
workshop on Monday in Abuja, warned the benefiting institutions against
compromising the objectives of the scheme.
Nigerian universities had won 10 out of the 19 slots for Africa.
The benefiting universities are the Federal University of
Agriculture, Abeokuta; Bayero University, Kano; Benue State University,
and the Redeemer’s University, Ede, Osun State.
Others are the University of Jos; Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria;
University of Benin; University of Port Harcourt, and the Obafemi
Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State.
Okojie
said, “The success of the ACE project holds the prospect of favourable
global ranking for Nigerian universities and the nation cannot afford to
toy with the opportunity.
“The feat of a Nigerian university, which assisted in checking the
spread and scourge of the Ebola Virus Disease when it broke out in the
country, would have ordinarily earned Nigeria a top place among world
universities.”
The NUC secretary added that investigations had commenced to identify
universities offering online degrees with a view to checking their
illicit operations.
The ACE project, inaugurated in 2014 by the governments of Nigeria,
Burkina Faso, Republic of Benin, Ghana, Cameroon, Togo and Senegal, is
to promote regional development challenges in the participating
countries.
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