Indications emerged last night that the Federal Government may have
resolved to scrap some of its agencies in line with the recommendations
of the Steve Oronsaye-led Presidential Committee on the Rationalization
and Restructuring of Federal Government Parastatals, Commissions and
Agencies following the completion of study of its White Paper Committee
report. Among those scrapped are Unified Tertiary Matriculation
Examination (UMTE), National Examination Council (NECO), Public
Complaints Commission, National Poverty Eradication Programme (NAPEP)
and the Fiscal Mobilization and Allocation Commission among others.
The Oronsaye committee had recommended the abolition of 38 agencies,
the merger of 52 and the reversion of 14 to departments in the
ministries from which they were carved out, a move the committee argued
would save the government more than N862 billion between 2012 and 2015
should its proposal be adopted. A reliable government source confirmed
that President Goodluck Jonathan, Vice President Namadi Sambo and
selected senior aides of the president met twice and eventually took
decisions, which included the scrapping of some agencies and merging of
others.
Another source revealed that the with the scrapping of the UTME,
individual universities in the country would conduct their own admission
examinations and admit students while the Joint Matriculation and
Examination Board will set and ensure compliance to standards as it acts
as the clearing house. The source said JAMB would be modeled along the
line of Universities and Colleges Admission Service (UCAS), the central
organization through which applications are processed for entry to
higher education in the United Kingdom.
According to the source, “individual university will do their own
examination and admission. If you want to apply to a university, you do
so but in order not to have a situation where one person gets multiple
admission, JAMB acts as a clearing house to free up spaces. All the
universities are free now to admit students.” Even though details were
still being worked out, it was learnt that government’s decision, was
informed by the need to promote merit in admission into the nation’s
universities because “the idea is to ensure that the best students go to
the best universities.”
The source further disclosed that the president had also approved
that the West African Examination Council (WAEC) is now expected to take
over the functions and vast infrastructure of NECO, which now ceases to
exist. The sources confirmed that WAEC would now conduct two external
examinations in a year, January and November. The Public Complaints
Commission is to be merged with the Human Rights Commission, just as
NAPEP would also be scrapped and replaced National Agency for Job
Creation and Empowerment.
The Oronsaye-led Presidential Committee on the Rationalisation made
far-reaching recommendations, which, it explained, were aimed at helping
the government to effect a drastic reduction in the size of its bloated
bureaucracy, eliminating duplication of functions and bringing down the
cost of governance. The committee submitted its report to the president
in April last year.
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