Atiku Won’t Hand Over Federal Universities To States, Says Aide
Atiku Abubakar, the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) presidential candidate, would not cede control of federal colleges to the states, according to Paul Ibe, the former vice president’s media adviser.
If Atiku is elected president in 2023, Ibe stated that Atiku will not remove education from the concurrent list. The concurrent list includes matters that are subject to both federal and state legislative authority.
Ibe provided the clarification in response to a remark made by Atiku on Monday during the general meeting of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Lagos.
One of the panelists at the event, a former vice president, described how a professor questioned him about his aspirations to bring education back to the United States.
“I said: ‘Mr Professor, do you realise that the first set of our universities belongs to the regional governments?’ He said, ‘yes’. I said ‘who are the successors of the regional government?’ He said: ‘the states’”, Atiku said.
“I said the children you send to America or England, who own those universities? Mostly the private sector. So, why is it that you think we cannot do it here? We don’t have the money.”
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But in a statement issued on Monday night, Ibe said there was a “mischievous misinterpretation” of what the PDP presidential candidate said.
“For the avoidance of doubt, Atiku did not say that he will hand over federal universities to state governments if he is elected president come February next year,” the statement reads.
“The report is false, untrue, unfounded and not a true reflection of what Atiku Abubakar said while responding to a question on devolution of powers, a key component of his policy framework.
“What the PDP presidential candidate referred to was his plans for a phased devolution of power to the federating units.
“In answering the question posed to him, Atiku Abubakar merely recalled his engagement with a university professor where he argued that the United States of America shared similarities with the first set of universities in Nigeria which belonged to the regional governments and noted that with proper planning and phased devolution of power, federal universities that have now become unwieldy could be made to work better under the component federating units. He also maintained that education would remain on the concurrent list under his administration when elected.
“We wish to restate Atiku Abubakar’s avowed commitment to education as a game changer for socio-economic development and national security. He remains concerned about the prolonged strike by university teachers and restates his position that under his watch the ASUU-FG imbroglio will be better managed in the interest of both the students and academic staff.”