The
Federal Government has revealed plans to establish a university of Information
and Communications Technology in 2017.
The
Minister of Communications, Adebayo Shittu, said this at a workshop organised
by the Nigeria Computer Society in Abuja on Friday.
Shittu,
who lamented that graduates of computer science in the country lacked skills to
fit into the ICT industry, said many of them were unemployable.
The
minister said the university would bridge the gap.
He
said, “The need to have an ICT academy was brought up by one of the speakers,
but what the government is proposing is more than setting up an academy. We
have had a government ICT institute, which has six campuses in the country.
“The
institute undertakes short-term courses, but we discovered that the facilities
in the institute were being under-utilised. Therefore, there are plans on the
way to transform it into a university.”
He
added, “The ICT university will dedicate itself to hands-on trainings. I have
discovered that many graduates of computer science are hardly fit or skilled
enough for the ICT industry in Nigeria. Therefore, we want to have a university
of ICT, where the private sector will play a key role in managing the syllabuses,
so that we can have skilled work force.
“This
will enable us to have skilled manpower, not only for the ICT industry in
Nigeria, but for the exports of these ICT services to different parts of
Africa. We are already formulating processes that will lead to the
establishment of this university. The university will take off in the first
quarter of 2017.”
The
minister added that corruption was a major reason for the rising rate of youth
unemployment in the country, adding that the government would fight the menace
to a standstill.
He
said, “On graduates without jobs in the country, every sector of the Nigerian
polity is having this problem. This is so because there is a dislocation in the
polity. The issue of corruption is a major problem. Corruption is a cankerworm,
which is destroying the entire system. This is why the government is striving
to fight corruption to a standstill.
“It
is part of corruption that when there are software and hardware produced by
Nigerians, our people are hardly willing to patronise these products. This is
why the government wants to have a local content policy to drive the patronage
of things produced in Nigeria.”
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