Governor Babatunde Fashola of
Lagos State, yesterday, accused the Federal Government of hiding reasons behind
the erratic power supply from Nigerians, lamenting that lack of regular
electricity supply had kept the poverty level in the country at its present
33.1 percent.
This came few days after the
Federal Government increased the price of gas from $1.50 to $3.30 per metric
cubic feet.
Fashola, who spoke at the 2014
edition of the Governor‘s Education Award in Ikeja, however, justified why the
state budget allocation to education was 16 percent, 10 per cent less than the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation, UNESCO
standard.
According to him, “If we do not succeed because those people (central
government) are busy lying about electricity, the children in this country will
not accept those lies. If they continue with those lies, the next generation of
people will solve it. We have done a basic power audit and we have discovered
that an average two bedroom flat in Lagos will consume about 1,000 kilowatts of
electricity. By generating this power through generating set, he spends N2, 097
daily but if there was public power, the person will be paying about N600
daily. This difference in fund would have been kept if the central government
provides power for the citizens.
“This money would have helped to reduce the rate poverty
in the country. Such fund would have been used to provide other needs rather
than enrich the countries who provide the generating sets. The state government
has approved the installation of solar facilities for public schools in the
state and the first phase will end May, 2015. 172 schools are captured in the
first phase. We are starting with 35 schools in the riverine areas and these
schools will serve as the pilot programme. It will be completed before the end
of this year.”
On education budget
The governor said the state‘s 16 per cent budgetary allocation to education did
not translate to under-funding of the sector, explaining that though the
figure was below the 26 per cent recommended by UNESCO, the state government
still provided extra-ministerial funding for the development of the sector.
He said, “Classrooms, and school furniture and other capital
projects were provided with budgetary allocation of the Ministry of Works and
Infrastructure. What we dedicate specifically to education, through the
Ministry of Education is not the full and complete extent of what we are
spending on education.”
There is for example, a school
health programme a school milk programme, which gives milk to our children
in order to improve their cells development that is a budget domiciled in the
Ministry of Health.
“But that is helping in the Ministry of Education, there
is a school`s Eye School Screening Corridor to test the eyes of the pupils
all of these initiatives are in the Ministry of Health. There are schools that
are flooding, there is waste management in the schools, and issues like these
are domiciled in the Ministry of the Environment. By the time you aggregate all
of these, I venture to argue that we will be well in excess of the thresholds
that are recognized for global standards.”
Fashola said the annual
Education Awards was to motivate performance in schools and reward excellence
adding that over N1billion had been spent as rewards for outstanding
schools since the inception of the award five years ago.
Special Adviser to the Governor
on Eko Project, Ms. Ronke Azeez, while speaking on the project, said the
initiative put funds in the hands of schools to fund their needs.
According to her, teachers and
principals had also been trained under the project in order to empower them
with the wherewithal to effectively manage their pupils.
She said the project had helped
improve standards as it had improved schools` performance in West African
Schools Certificate Examinations (WASCE) by 18.41per cent in 2009 to 41.6
percent in 2013.
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