By RismadarVoice Media, December 11, 2025
The Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, has lauded the Aliko Dangote Foundation Education Scholarship Initiative, as it will open transformative doors as sustainable pathways for lives to be transformed.
Shettima, who flagged off the initiative, said it calls for stakeholders’s recommitment to building a future where every Nigerian child can thrive well
This is just as the President of the Foundation, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, unveiled a #100 billion annual education support programme, aimed at strengthening Nigeria’s educational sector, expanding access to quality learning for young people – nationwide.
The programme, projected to cost #1 trillion over the next ten years, will support students across multiple levels through a range of targeted schemes.
Speaking on Thursday in Lagos during the launch of the education scholarship scheme, the Vice President mentioned that education is a burden carried by those with the knowledge of its power to transform.
He added, “now is the time to recommit to building a future where every Nigerian child has a fair shot at becoming the best version of themselves”.
” Let us live our lives so posterity will remember us, not for the offices we held, the titles we bore. Posterity must remember us for the doors we opened and the lives we transformed”.
He urged the private sector and corporate entities to invest in education, insisting that they must consider themselves as stakeholders in the survival of Nigeria’s education system.
Stressing that there was no better time than now to confront the “consequences of demographic acceleration,” VP Shettima said, “A youthful population is a global asset, only when it is educated. Without education, it becomes a threat to itself, nation that houses it.
We come from a difficult history. Formal education was once treated as an intrusion. It was seen as an affliction. It was seen as a scheme to estrange children from their heritage.
“The residue of that suspicion, the gap that misunderstanding created, still weighs heavily upon our national progress.”
Furthermore, the VP pointed that, rather than expecting a miracle, mere rhetoric to close or erase the gap created by such misunderstanding, deliberate efforts must be made “to end a needless cycle of failure that has persisted for so too long.”
This, according to him, inspired President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to roll out bold, far-reaching reforms, including the introduction of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund, NELFUND, to create equitable access to education for all – under his watch.
“We strengthened UBEC to deepen basic education infrastructure and accountability. We expanded TETFUND’s intervention footprint to revitalise tertiary institutions.
” We accelerated our Technical and Vocational Education and Training programmes to reflect the needs of a new economy. We also mainstreamed digital learning as a core national priority,” he added.
The Vice President however, decried what he described as the “reality of West Africa, a region that now carries the burden of having the lowest Human Capital Index in the world”, emphasizing that Nigeria must invest in education to reverse the trend.
“We must treat education as a survival strategy. This is why our administration treats the National Human Capital Development Programme as a national emergency.
“We are bringing states, development partners, the private sector and civil society together to reclaim our destiny,” he added.
The VP described the Founder/President, CEO of the Dangote Group, Alhaji Dangote, as standing apart, saying “in a nation that has produced giants, he remains a colossus.
Commending the #100 billion education scheme, he said, “His (Dangote’s) philanthropy is not episodic. His philanthropy is structural, generational, visionary.
He is not only the largest private employer of labour in Nigeria. He has also become the most consequential private investor in the rescue of our most critical sector, education,” he said.
Earlier, Alhaji Dangote said the Foundation’s education support programme will strengthen Nigeria’s educational sector and expand access to quality learning for young people nationwide, assuring that all beneficiaries will be selected through a transparent, merit-based process.
He further disclosed partnerships with NELFUND, NECO, WAEC, and other government agencies to ensure accountability, fairness in programme delivery, revealing that he has dedicated 25 percent of his personal wealth to the foundation, a commitment that will extend beyond his lifetime.
The Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, described the initiative as one of the most comprehensive human capital development programmes in Nigeria’s history, which aligns with the Federal Government’s education reform agenda.
Dr. Alausa also noted that 25 percent of the scholarship slots will be reserved for persons living with disabilities, calling the gesture a “humane and inclusive approach.”
In her goodwill message, United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, commended the foundation’s investment in education, saying the expanded scholarship opportunities—particularly in Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET)—would create new pathways for Nigerian children.
She described investment in girls’ education as one of the most powerful tools for societal progress.
Speaking on behalf of state Governors, Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu applauded Dangote’s commitment to the future of Nigerian youth.
He acknowledged that the Dangote Foundation has redefined philanthropy in Nigeria, said state governments will work to ensure the success of the initiative, beginning with Lagos State, which has allocated 10 percent of its annual budget to education.

For his part, the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, Ojaja II, commended Dangote for the initiative, even as he encouraged him to continue championing efforts that improve the lives of Nigerians.
On his part, the Emir of Lafia and Chairman of the Steering Committee of the Aliko Dangote Foundation, Justice Sidi Bage (rtd), pledged the committee’s dedication towards ensuring the initiative’s success.
He noted that the long-term multiplier effect of the foundation’s education interventions would significantly strengthen Nigeria’s human capital over the next decade and beyond.

The high point of the event was the unveiling of the vision 2030 100 $billion logo of the Dangote Foundation.


