FG approves four new private universities

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The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday in Abuja approved the establishment of four new private Universities in Kaduna, Oyo, Ogun and Osun states.
The Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu confirmed this development when he briefed State House correspondents at the end of the first meeting of the council in 2019, which was presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari.

According to the minister, the new Universities are Greenfield University Kaduna, Dominion University, Ibadan, Oyo state, Trinity University, Laloko, Ogun state and Westland University in Iwo, Osun state.

“All the four have satisfied the criteria for the establishment of the universities.

“They have submitted their academic briefs, their master plans and evidence of facilities after visitation by the National Universities Commission (NUC), they have satisfied all those requirements and they are being granted licenses,’’ he added.

The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who also addressed the correspondents on the outcome of the meeting, said the Council approved a National Public Building Maintenance Policy and Framework.

He said the new policy, which institutionalized a maintenance culture in the country, saying that some of the benefits of the policy would be to provide an inventory of government assets, and job opportunities for hundreds of thousands of Nigerians.

“We have trained artisans at different levels but we haven’t created an economy for them to go and express themselves – Tilers, Bricklayers, Plumbers, landscapers, fitters etc. When they leave training schools what do they do? They go and ride tricycles where there is no training school because there is an economy in tricycles – this is the answer.

“So, we have started with a pilot (scheme) to demonstrate to Council that this will work.

“Some of the things that this will bring include an inventory of all assets that government owns. It gives us an assessment of the conditions and value, then, it gives us a maintenance framework about what needs to be done after assessments and then a maintenance procurement manual.

Fashola also disclosed that the Council approved the first contract of over N812.5million, for demarcation of specific area of land to be affected by the actual construction of the Mambilla Hydro Power Project.

He said the contract involved nine land surveying companies, saying that the demarcation would eventually lead to enumeration, resettlement and preparatory to payment of compensation and commencement of main construction of the Power Project.

The minister revealed that the council approved N2.6billion for the reconstruction of Sharada – Madubi road in Kano and another N23.8 billion for the reconstruction of New Bussa – Kaiyama road linking Niger and Kwara states.

On his part, the Minister of State, Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, revealed that the Council approved N3.7billion for the replacement of damaged petroleum pipelines for the Ministry of Petroleum Resources.

He said the pipelines were affected by corrosion but would be replaced with a new technology, flexible pipeline.

“The essence of this was that in 2014, the pipeline with which we were evacuating crude in that area gave way and so production became very marginal.

“We were producing an average of about 20, 000 barrels per day as opposed to the capacity of between 37,000 and 40, 000 barrels and this contract is therefore to replace that pipeline with a new technology, flexible pipeline, to resist corrosion,” the minister explained.

The Minister of State, Aviation, Sen. Hadi Sirika said the council approved five million dollars for the procurement and installation of the second phase of the Controller Pilot Data Link Communication for the Kano flight information region which will cover Abuja and Lagos airports.