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'Nation' launches scholarship programme

Tuesday March 01 2011
scholarship

Kenya's Education minister Sam Ongeri (3rd left), Nation Media Group Chairman Wilfred Kiboro (second left), NMG Chief Executive Officer Linus Gitahi and Education Secretary George Godia (2nd right) with the students who are benefitting from the Nation Get on Bus scholarship programme during the launch at the Nairobi Hilton on March 1, 2011. Photo/FREDRICK OMONDI

The Nation Media Group Tuesday launched a scholarship programme that will see 75 students in East Africa benefit from fully paid secondary school education.

The “Get on the Bus” scholarship programme will take on board 25 students each from Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania through an initiative supported by the company’s staff.

The programme has already began in Uganda and was launched in Nairobi Tuesday by Education minister Sam Ongeri.

The 25 Kenyan students are drawn from various provincial and national schools and joined Form 1 this year. They were selected from a group of students who applied through essays on why they needed to proceed to secondary school to excel.

Prof Ongeri called on other institutions to develop such initiatives as a way of ensuring that the government was not alone in providing financial aid for less privileged students.

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“The government has identified lack of school fees as one of the obstacles to the attainment of education,” he said.

NMG board chairman Wilfred Kiboro said the initiative was aimed at ensuring that a large number of less privileged students got secondary education.

He said that it was important for the society to ensure that a larger number of children were able to access education.

“The best thing is for us to ensure that we invest in our children instead of investing for them,” said Mr Kiboro.

And NMG’s Chief Executive Linus Gitahi said the initiative was an extension of the many education programmes that the company was involved in.

“At Nation Media Group, we need a lot of talent. So the more people who can write, or work in television and radio, the better,” said Mr Gitahi.

Prof Ongeri also urged organisations to help the government establish talent academies to cater for students who excel in extra-curricular activities

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