Development partners under the platform of Global Partnership for Education (GEP), have provided 100 million dollars (N19.8bn) grant for girl-child education in five North-West states.
Mr Olatunde Adekola,
Task Team Leader, GPE/NIPEP, made this known at the inauguration of the
Nigerian Partnership for Education Project (NIPEP) on Monday in Abuja.
He listed the benefitting states as
Sokoto, Jigawa, Kano, Kastina and Kaduna.
The
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the partners are United
States Agency for International Development (USAID), Department for
International Development (DFID), UNICEF and World Bank.
The title of the project is `Improving Access and Quality of Basic Education with Emphasis on Girls Participation'.
Adekola,
who is the World Bank Senior Education Specialist for Africa, said that
the role of the bank was to supervise and to ensure that all the
partners were accountable.
He said that GPE was
part of UN efforts to support developing countries, especially on how to
bring more girls to school and make them stay in school and learn.
The
Word Bank education specialist said that the objective of the project
launch was to sensitise the citizenry about the delivery process,
knowledge sharing and capacity building.
``Since
the effort is to bring more girls to school, we are focusing on five
states in the North-West that have more girls out of school -- Sokoto,
Jigawa, Kano, Kastina and Kaduna.
``The allocation
is 100 million dollars; 95 percent of it is for the five states; while 5
per cent is for the supervising ministry and the Universal Basic
Education (UBEC).
``The project seeks to give equitable opportunity to boys and girls and improve access and quality.
``It
will provide scholarship for girls and and incentives so that they can
come to school and stay in school; there will also be incentives for
female teachers of the schools.’’
Adekola said
that the development partners were already working on those states which
also contributed to the choice of the five states.
According to him, DFID is working in Jigawa, Kano and Kaduna; USAID is working in Sokoto while UNICEF is working in Kastina.
He
said that the money was not from World Bank but from a pool of
contributions from UN development partners, adding that many countries
had been benefiting in the last five years.
According to him, the project will run for four years.
On his part, Malam Adamu Adamu, the Minister of Education, said the project marked a turning point in getting out-of-school children back to school.
Represented by Prof Anthony Anwukah, the Minister of State for Education, Adamu said that 100 million dollars was a catalyst for boosting basic education.
Responding on behalf of the benefitting states, Gov. Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State thanked GPE for the gesture.
``We,
as governors, assure that we will do our best in ensuring the provision
of structures that will transparently execute this project.
``Money allocated for this project will be judiciously used,’’ he said.
The
highlight of the event was the inauguration of the National Steering
Committee on NIPEP comprising commissioners of education from the five
states, representatives of UBEC and the Ministry of Education.
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