Over 150 students studying under the Rivers State Sustainable Development Agency (RSSDA) scholarship scheme,
sponsored by Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, the former governor of Rivers
state, could be facing deportation from September 21, 2015. The students
might lose their visas due to the large amount of money owed to several
universities by the state government. Some of these students have
camped in front of the Nigerian embassy, protesting and pleading with
the current state government to come to their aid.
RSSDA
was established in 2008 under Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi’s administration,
to enhance rural and urban development, create new avenues to wealth
and unemployment with special focus to improve human capital in the
state. In an arm of this scheme, scholarships are provided to students
at undergraduate and post graduate levels to study outside the country.
Under the scholarship scheme,
students air fare, feeding, accommodation, tuition and stipends are
taken care of by the government and they are given the opportunity to
school in the United Kingdom, the United States of America, Singapore,
India and the Netherlands. Since the scholarship scheme has started in
2008, over 2000 students have benefited from it. It has also been lauded
by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for
being a model for educationally disadvantaged states in Nigeria.
However, it seems to be a different story in 2014 as the Amaechi-led administration refused
to release funds for the tuition and upkeep of these scholars until he
eventually left office in May 2015. As a result of the delay in payment,
many students have been forced to take up menial jobs and depend on the
charity of others in a bid to survive. The United Kingdom Border Agency
(UKBA) has given the students 60 days to vacate the country.
According to the scholarship recipients, the cost of their school
fees, accommodation and upkeep allowance equals to £16,000, an
equivalent of N5 million per student, which could hardly be covered by
the menial jobs that pay students an average of £6 (N1, 900) per hour.
Recently, Amaechi claimed
that he left a total of N8 billion in the treasury in response to
Nyesom Wike’s accusation that the former governor left nothing in the
state accounts. It is equally noteworthy that within the first 30 days
of his administration, Wike took a loan of N30 billion and he was able
to pay N712 million to offset some of the debts owed to the RSSDA
scholars; even though the debt was incurred by the former administration
led by Amaechi.
The question remains- if Amaechi had left N8 billion in the state
government account at the end of his tenure, why didn’t he pay the
school fees of the students under scholarship for two years?
Ventures Africa
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