Government of Liberia Needs to Investigate the Nekoteck
STEM Scholarship
The Government of the Republic of Liberia through the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced a Stem Scholarship for Liberian
students wishing to undertake master degrees studies in the United States of
America and Canada. STEM stands for Science, Tehcnology, Engineering
and Mathematics. This means that for any Liberian student to qualify
for such master program, he/she must have obtained a Bachelor degree in the
natural Sciences. According to the Foreign Ministry, “the Ministry of Education
and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs are handling the processes for this scholarship and the
scholarship has been negotiated by a third party named NEKOTECH under a loan
scheme” (MFA Press Briefing, 2024). The Liberian Constitution
indicates that if any entity in the government would like to contract or secure
a loan for Liberia, such loan must first be ratified by the Liberian National
Legislature. What are the terms and conditions for the loan to fund this
scholarship? Has the National Legislature ratified the loan? The President of
the Republic of Liberia officially launched the scholarship program. After
this, debates abound in public that the scholarship program is a “scam.” Was
the President made to launch a “Scammed scholarship program”? God forbid. The
President launched the scholarship program out of love for building the capacities
of Liberia’s future generations. It is therefore my hope that the Scholarship
program is not a “scam” as is being debated.
From my experience, the Foreign Ministry does not need
a third party company to find scholarships for Liberian students wishing to
write their master degrees in the Stem or any other areas. The Foreign Ministry
gets scholarships from several countries around the world. For instance, the
governments of Israel, India, China, Australia, Pakistan, Austria, Morocco,
Nigeria, Ethiopia, Italy, the United States, Ghana, Canada, Indonesia, Japan,
Turkey, Mexico, and several other countries have been offering scholarships to
Liberia through the Foreign Ministry. Simply
put, most if not all governments in the world have given Liberian scholarships.
So, why should the Foreign Ministry get third parties like NEKOTECH involved to
front for government scholarship program that is being considered a “scam”? Traditionally,
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs gets scholarships for technical, undergraduate,
master, and even doctoral degrees in some instances. All that is required is
that the Foreign Ministry needs to express Liberia’s interest in the areas of
preference (s) that the country wants its citizens to gain an education.
Interestingly also, this is a “loan scheme” that must be ratified by the
National Legislature. Has the National Legislature ratified the Loan of about
$26Million US?
AS I SEE IT,
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs can attract thousands of undergraduate,
graduated/post-graduate or tertiary scholarships. The Ministry simply needs to
express its interest and lobby with friendly governments. So, why should
Liberia vouch for a loan scheme for 250 Liberians to study abroad for master’s
degrees in the STEM area? The government does not need loan (s) and third
parties to negotiate scholarships with other governments. In time past, some
governments gave about five hundred scholarships annually to graduates of high
schools to study from bachelor’s to doctoral degree levels. Thousands of
scholarships have come through the Foreign Ministry. For example, this writer competed
for and won the Australian Awards Scholarship. This was how he studied for his
second master’s degree (master’s in public policy-MPP) at the Australian
National University where he specialised in Development Policy or Development
Economics with distinction in 2014. Why going to school, he was paid $3,000
Australian Dollars monthly ($1,500.00 biweekly) by the Australian Government.
This was not a “loan scheme.” After graduation, you were required to return
home and work for your county for at least 3 years before migrating back to
Australia if you wanted to. Today, Liberia does not qualify for the Australia
Awards Scholarship Program. Why? Because the Government through the Foreign
Ministry has not requested the Australian Government to renew the program. Why can’t
they? The Ministry simply needs to write a justification why Liberians need to
benefit from such program again. I am certain that the many graduates from
Australian Universities could help the Ministry/Government to prepare the
documentation for this process based on request from the Government.
AS I SEE IT,
the Government of the Republic must investigate news about the scholarship
program being a “scam” so that it can quickly inform the public on the truth
because students have already applied and are applying. Many more will apply
because they believe in the Government. Immediate steps should/must be taken to
arrest this globally embarrassing situation. Adequate steps must also be taken
to tell Liberians the truth. The Government needs to urgently address this
embarrassment. Therefore, the Government needs to thoroughly investigate the
veracity about this scholarship program to get the facts and share with the
public as soon as possible. This could help to restore and increase confidence
in all scholarship processes by the Government. The Government and people of
Liberia are not prepared to belief this information about a “fake scholarship”
deal led by the Government. It is hoped that the Government will do the right
thing.
About the Author: Prof. Tom Kaydor, Jr. holds a PhD from the Department of
Government and European Studies, the New University, Slovenia where he
researched International Development and Diplomacy (with Security Aspects). His
dissertation topic was ‘Reconceptualizing Africa’s Regional Integration for
Peace and Sustainable Development.’ He earned a Master of Public Policy (MPP)
specialized in Development Policy or Development Economics with Distinction
from the Crawford School of Economics and Government (now the Crawford School
of Public Policy), Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. He also
obtained a Master of Arts (MA) in International Relations (Highest Distinction)
and Bachelor of Arts (BA) Magna Cum Laude in Political Science from the University
of Liberia where he currently serves as an Assistant Professor at the IBB
Graduate School of International Studies. He also holds a Diploma in Leading
Economic Growth from the Kennedy Graduate School, Harvard University, USA; and
he holds other diplomas and certificates in professional fields from Italy, UK,
Pakistan, China and Israel, Prof. Kaydor is equally an Adjunct Professor of
Development Studies at the AME University Graduate School. Dr. Kaydor is an
evidence-based researcher, a blogger, a columnist, and a published author. One
can reach him via (kaydorth@ul.edu.lr or thkaydor@gmail.com).
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