The Federal Government has once again shown how little it values education. On Thursday in Abuja, the Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, presented Nafisa Abdullahi, Nigeria’s shining star at the TeenEagle Global Finals, with a cash gift of ₦200,000. Yes, you are not mistaken, just ₦200k for a teenager who carried Nigeria’s name to global excellence.
While the rest of the world celebrates its champions with life-changing rewards, Nigeria reduces a world-class achievement to the cost of a party weekend. Nafisa outclassed competitors from 69 countries, winning for her command of English, critical thinking, and articulation, yet the response from her own government was nothing short of insulting.
Atiku Foundation Shows the Difference
For contrast, the Atiku Abubakar Foundation stepped in where the government failed. It offered Nafisa and her teammates, Rukaiya Fema and Khadija Kalli, fully-funded scholarships to support their academic growth. That is what true investment in education looks like — long-term support, not a token gesture meant for headlines.
The Foundation described their achievement as a “remarkable success” and rightly so. These girls proved that Nigerian talent can compete and win on the world stage. But instead of building on that momentum, the Federal Government delivered what many see as a slap in the face: ₦200k, an amount that barely covers the cost of textbooks for one session in university.
Why This Matters
This moment goes beyond Nafisa. It highlights how Nigeria repeatedly undermines education and discourages its brightest minds. We invest billions in politics but cannot reward excellence in classrooms. A government that truly values education would see a global victory like this as an opportunity to inspire millions of students. Instead, the Federal Government chose the path of pettiness.
Bottom Line
This is a statement about Nigeria’s misplaced priorities. Nafisa carried the Nigerian flag with pride, but in return, the government gave her a reward that insults her achievement. Until Nigeria starts treating education as seriously as politics, our brightest will continue to shine abroad while being undervalued at home.