General News
FG unveils Unified Education Data Platform to tackle out-of-school crisis and embed entrepreneurship in tertiary institutions
By Our Correspondent
In abid to embed entrepreneurship training in the nation’s educational system,the Federal Government has moved to put Nigeria’s fragmented education data under one roof with the rollout of the Nigeria Education Data Infrastructure, NEDI, a platform designed to track learners from nursery to university, cut the number of out-of-school children, and embed entrepreneurship training across higher institutions.
Speaking at the Stakeholders’ Workshop on NEDI in Abuja, Hon. Minister of Education, Dr. Morufu Olatunji Alausa, said the initiative will serve as “a single, reliable source of educational data” for basic, secondary, and tertiary levels, consolidating inputs from agencies and examination bodies to drive evidence-based policy and accountability.
“For two and a half years ago, all our educational data was fragmented. We don’t even know the number of kids in our primary school,” Alausa said. “Today, that’s gone. I can tell you today, the primary school in the state, the number of students there, the number of boys, the number of girls, the number of teachers, the concentration of those teachers. And I can tell you the facilities in that primary school, just sitting in my office.”
The Minister said the he ministry has engaged Ernst & Young to design the system architecture and integration framework linking key education data sources nationwide. NEDI will aggregate data from pre-primary, primary, junior and senior secondary schools up to tertiary institutions, mapping it from school level to local government, state, and national levels.
Explaining further, he said the platform will also track infrastructure down to usable classrooms, computers, and washbasins, giving planners real-time visibility to direct investment and monitor outcomes.
Alausa disclosed that 80% of development partner and development bank financing over the last decade went to two geopolitical zones that simultaneously recorded the lowest reduction in out-of-school children.
“If we had used data before, we would have known where the investment needs to go,” he said. “Today, I’m happy to tell you that core practice is gone completely.”
He highlighted that central to NEDI is the introduction of a national Learner Identification Number, aligned with the National Identity Number system. The unique ID will contain the learner’s state, local government, school ID, year of admission, and serial number.
“Once they get into school, they have this unique ID number that will make the mutual to their national identity number,” Alausa explained. “So if a student started school in a new school today, and the parents move to Lagos, we know that this student started at this school, in this local government, at this school.”
The Minister said the system will make “miracle centers” and exam fraud unsustainable. Nigeria’s 250,000 schools will be geotagged, and officials will proactively intervene when a child drops out, instead of reacting after millions are lost to the system.
All candidates sitting for NECO and WAEC this year will receive a Learner ID, with a retroactive rollout starting from February 1. NYSC participants are also being enrolled immediately, the Minister said.
Linking Education to Jobs and Entrepreneurship, the Minister said NEDI will feed into a national skills gap analysis, matching student admissions to labor market needs at local government, state, and federal levels.
“We want to be able to guide them; What are the kind of jobs they need? Doctors, nurses, software engineers, scientists,” Alausa said. “A student in Niger State will be able to say, oh, there’s so much need for nursing, so much need for software engineering. So they’ll decide their career based on the quality of life they want.”
He announced that at the tertiary level, the Ministry is introducing entrepreneurship integration and business certification across all courses. A chemical engineering student, for example, will take entrepreneurship training throughout their five-year program.
“You want to create entrepreneurs as well as students, not job-seekers,” the Minister said. He cited recent reforms, including the elimination of the UTME requirement for Colleges of Education offering agricultural technology courses, as part of a push to widen access and raise teacher quality.
Alausa highlighted a shift in gender performance, noting that more women than men sat for the most recent JAMB exams. “Women are performing wonders in the country,” he said, addressing the Minister of Women Affairs. “This is very refreshing news.”
He thanked development partners, singling out UNICEF for saving 18 months on the digitalization agenda, and called on state commissioners, NYSC, the Federal Character Commission, and examination bodies like NECO and WAEC to ensure clean, timely data feeds into the platform.
“This will give us more improved governance. Education stands at the center of human capital development. It will be the backbone of any national economy,” Alausa said.
“We have a huge population. 70% of the population is young. We need to balance it. And what we need to do to do that is to take that very well, and if we want to take that very well, we need to have data at the center of everything we do today.”
The workshop included presentations by the NEDI coordinator and Ernst & Young on data collection, aggregation, disaggregation, and use cases. Stakeholders were invited to provide feedback before full national implementation.
The Minister says NEDI will be open to the public once fully deployed, with AI tools allowing users to query the data directly: “Whatever information you want, you just ask it.”
Speaking in her good will message, the Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Hon. Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim, commended the Federal Ministry of Education for convening a Stakeholders’ Workshop on the Nigeria Education Data Infrastructure (NEDI), describing it as a strategic step to strengthen the country’s education sector.
Sulaiman-Ibrahim said the workshop’s timing is significant, coming on the eve of the International Day of Families on May 15 and ahead of the 2026 National Children’s Day on May 27.
She noted that the period underscores the link between strong educational systems, stable family structures, and protected childhoods as foundations for national transformation.
The minister highlighted NEDI as a visionary initiative to reposition Nigeria’s education sector through integrated, credible, and technology-driven data governance. She said such a system would improve national planning, learning outcomes, and inclusive educational development across all levels.
Sulaiman-Ibrahim stressed that in a country of over 230 million people, where children and young persons form a large share of the population, a harmonised education data ecosystem is critical.
She added that education remains a key tool for social protection, noting global evidence that each additional year of schooling for a girl improves health outcomes, reduces child marriage, and boosts lifetime earnings.
She pointed to the urgency of the initiative against Nigeria’s challenge of over 10 million out-of-school children, saying reliable and actionable data is needed to guide targeted interventions, equitable resource allocation, and stronger child protection mechanisms.
The minister linked NEDI to the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, particularly the Renewed Hope Social Impact Intervention (RHSII-774) under the Human Capital Development and Social Investment pillar.
She also noted that the Federal Government’s declaration of 2026 as the Year of Family and Social Development further reinforces the initiative’s relevance.
Sulaiman-Ibrahim called the workshop more than a technical engagement, framing it as a national conversation on the future of Nigeria’s children, families, and human capital.
She reaffirmed her ministry’s commitment to collaborating with development partners and stakeholders to advance inclusive education, gender equality, child protection, and social development.
“What we do with data today determines the opportunities we create for children tomorrow,” she said, urging that the workshop mark a milestone toward ensuring “no child is invisible, no family is forgotten.”
General News
COSFAN launches endowment fund for research in Nigerian varsities *Honours Gambari with N10m Gift to Unilorin
By Abdul-Ganiyy Akanbi
The Commonwealth Scholars and Fellows Alumni Association Nigeria, COSFAN, has pledged to institute endowment funds in perpetuity across Nigerian universities to support research in tertiary institutions.
The first endowment, worth N10 million, was unveiled at the Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies, University of Ilorin, in honour of former UN Under-Secretary-General, Professor Ibrahim Gambari, for his contributions to national development.
COSFAN leaders noted at the event that in a world defined by complex conflicts and competing interests, the link between peace and development has never been more critical.
“Peace provides the essential foundation upon which all meaningful development must be built. Without security and stability, nations cannot attract investment, build infrastructure, educate their children, or provide healthcare for their citizens,” the association stated.
In his remarks, Professor Gambari said the gesture came at a critical time when the study and practice of peace and development is increasingly important.
“It’s a big honour for me and I’m truly delighted. For me, this is very timely. It’s a commitment to mentoring, to excellence and to encouraging particularly the youths to do their best in whatever it is and in their chosen profession.
“There’s no higher commitment than a profession that combines the study and the practice of peace and development in the country,” he said.
Professor Gambari also disclosed that the Angolan government had earlier honoured him for his role in restoring peace during the country’s civil war.
He thanked past and present presidents of COSFAN, as well as all contributors who made the occasion memorable.l
COSFAN President, Dr Ekundayo Samuel, and immediate past President, Dr Abiola Adimula, said the endowment was instituted to sustain Professor Gambari’s legacy in peace and development studies.
Chairman of COSFAN Board of Trustees, Professor Olugbemiro Jegede, said the association would sustain the initiative to promote research, peace and development across the country.
Deputy Vice Chancellor, Research, Technology and Innovation, University of Ilorin, Professor Mukhtar Etudaye, described the endowment as “a move in the right direction”.
Director of the Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies, Unilorin, Professor Gbemisola Animashaun, called on Nigerians and philanthropists to support research work in the nation’s tertiary institutions.
COSFAN said it will replicate the endowment model in other universities to strengthen research capacity and advance scholarship in peace, security and development.
General News
Nigeria positioned to lead Africa’s digital and creative transformation, EU Ambassador says
By Our Correspondent
Nigeria is well positioned to lead Africa’s digital and creative transformation, Ambassador Gautier Mignot, European Union Ambassador to Nigeria and ECOWAS, said at the third edition of the Omniverse Africa Summit in Lagos.Speaking at the opening of the summit, Ambassador Mignot said Nigeria’s youthful population, entrepreneurial energy and growing innovation ecosystem provide a strong foundation for digital transformation, innovation and economic growth.“The new economy, digital and creative, offers a fantastic opportunity,” he said, noting that young Nigerians are uniquely positioned to drive innovation because they are part of a generation that has grown up with digital tools and technologies.The summit brought together innovators, entrepreneurs, policymakers,
researchers, investors, creatives and development partners from across Africa and beyond to explore how technology, innovation and collaboration can accelerate economic growth and create opportunities for young people.Ambassador Mignot said the European Union and Nigeria have identified the digital and creative sectors as a strategic priority within their partnership and highlighted ongoing investments aimed at supporting the country’s digital transformation.“In Nigeria, the EU supports the entire digital value chain, from governance to infrastructure, from skills to entrepreneurship,” he said.He highlighted several ongoing initiatives, including a recently signed €45 million agreement between the European Union and Nigeria on digital development, support for the rollout of 90,000 kilometres of fibre-optic infrastructure across the country, the European Union’s contribution to Nigeria’s digital public infrastructure agenda, and support for the Three Million Technical Talent initiative.The Ambassador also pointed to programmes that support entrepreneurship, innovation and skills development, including the Digital Transformation Centre Nigeria, co-funded by the European Union and the German Government and implemented by GIZ. The programme supports digital innovation, entrepreneurship and technology adoption among young Nigerians and businesses.He also highlighted the Nigeria Jubilee Fellows Programme, funded by the European Union and implemented by the United Nations Development Programme in partnership with the Federal Government of Nigeria, which helps connect young graduates with workplace opportunities and practical experience.German Ambassador to Nigeria, Annett Günther, said:
“The future will not be built in silos. It will be built through cooperation across sectors, institutions and borders. The future will be connected.”She described Nigeria as home to one of Africa’s most dynamic innovation ecosystems and said Nigerian entrepreneurs are increasingly shaping global trends in areas ranging from financial technology and artificial intelligence to agribusiness, health innovation, manufacturing and the creative industries.“Nigerian innovators are not simply adapting to global trends. They are shaping them,” she said.Ambassador Mignot said one of the strengths of Omniverse Africa is its ability to bring together the full innovation ecosystem in a single space.“Policymakers, founders, investors, creatives, researchers, development partners and business leaders are all here, all together,” he said.“Because Nigeria’s digital future will not be built in silos. Technology, creative industries, finance,
education, manufacturing, agriculture and public services are no longer separate worlds. They are converging.”He said the summit provides an opportunity to transform conversations into partnerships and ideas into practical solutions that can support inclusive and sustainable growth.“The future is connected, but connection must be turned into impact,” Ambassador Mignot said.“Let us connect innovators with investors, policy with practice, creativity with technology, and Nigerian talent with global opportunities.”The summit featured discussions on digital transformation, artificial intelligence, entrepreneurship, green technology, future skills, research collaboration and innovation financing, highlighting the growing role of partnerships in shaping Africa’s economic future.The European Union partnered with Omniverse Africa as part of its broader commitment to supporting innovation, entrepreneurship, digital transformation and youth opportunities in Nigeria and across the continent.
General News
Team Europe Explores Kannywood’s Potential to Create Jobs, Skills, Opportunity and Social Change Across Northern Nigeria Kano, Nigeria –
By Michael Agbaji
Diplomats from Team Europe have visited Kano Film Village to gain first-hand insight into how Kannywood is contributing to youth employment, education and economic opportunity across northern Nigeria, while also promoting positive social values through storytelling.
The delegation was led by the European Union Ambassador to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Gautier Mignot, and included ambassadors and deputy heads of mission from Denmark, Spain, Italy, France, Czechia, Finland, Belgium and Austria.
The delegation was received by the Executive Secretary of the Kano State Films and Video Censorship Board, Alhaji Abba El-Mustapha, and the Managing Director of the Nigerian Film Corporation, Ali Nuhu.
During the visit, Team Europe met with filmmakers, actors, producers and regulators, and observed the production of Hindatu, a film that tells the story of a young girl determined to continue her education and pursue a career in medicine despite pressure from her family to marry at an early age.
Speaking during the visit, Ambassador Mignot emphasised the transformative power of storytelling and the creative arts.
“Stories have the power to inspire change.
Films that promote education, opportunity and inclusion can spark important conversations and encourage positive change within communities,” he said.
He added: “Creative industries are not only about culture. They are also about jobs, skills, entrepreneurship and creating opportunities for young people.
Across Nigeria, young people are demonstrating remarkable talent and creativity, and industries such as Kannywood are helping transform that potential into livelihoods and economic opportunity.”
The Executive Secretary of the Kano State Films and Video Censorship Board, Alhaji Abba El-Mustapha, highlighted Kannywood’s role in promoting positive social values while creating opportunities for practitioners across the creative sector.
According to him, the Board has approved more than 10,000 films over the years and continues to support the industry through training programmes, workshops and stakeholder engagement.
“Our role is not only regulatory,” he said. “We also work with filmmakers to strengthen professional standards, support capacity development and ensure that films contribute positively to society.”
The delegation also toured Kano Film Village, a production facility developed by broadcaster and filmmaker Abdullaziz Dansmall.
The facility provides a dedicated environment where films can be produced efficiently and professionally.
“Our first major production was Gidang Haya. We used the revenue from that project to build little by little, expanding the facility over time,” Dansmall explained.
“Our long-term ambition is to transform the site into a fully developed film village capable of supporting larger productions.”
The Managing Director of the Nigerian Film Corporation, Ali Nuhu, underscored the economic importance of the industry, citing research which identified film production as the second-largest source of youth employment in Kano State after agriculture.
He noted that the industry’s impact extends far beyond entertainment, creating livelihoods and supporting businesses throughout the value chain.
Ali Nuhu also highlighted some of the challenges facing the sector, particularly in the areas of distribution and access to production facilities.
He observed that Kannywood has increasingly adapted to digital platforms and online distribution channels following the decline of traditional DVD markets.
The visit comes as the European Union expands its support for cultural cooperation between Africa and Europe through initiatives such as the Africa-Europe Partnerships for Culture (AEPC), a €30 million programme that supports artist mobility, cultural spaces and collaboration between African and European creative professionals.
The initiative reflects the EU’s growing recognition of culture and creative industries as powerful drivers of economic opportunity, innovation and social development.
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