Interim Administrator, Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP), Col. Milland Dixon Dikio (rtd), has urged PAP’s scholarship students to build skills in areas that can guarantee them immediate employment in reputable organisations after graduation.
Dikio gave the advice in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, during a meeting with a delegation of the students under the auspices of the National Association of Presidential Amnesty Students Worldwide (NAPASW).
The meeting was part of Dikio’s routine engagement to hear students’ challenges and encourage them to attain greatness.
Dikio said the world had moved from conventional learning to knowledge-based economy, adding that persons with such skills would easily secure jobs.
He said: “There is a means to an end; education is a means to an end. We are living in a knowledge-based world, now companies like Google are looking for people to employ. The end game is that Niger Delta must be the best place to live and do business, and that responsibility lies on not just us, but you as well”.
Dikio reminded the students of the need to be good ambassadors of the Niger Delta, stressing that his vision of making the region the best place to live and do business could only be realised with their collective efforts.
He asked them to be mindful of their public conducts, work hard to make good grades and become worthy in character and learning from their respective institutions.
The PAP boss assured them of his commitment to their welfare, but stressed that rascality of any kind would not be tolerated because such attitude would paint them in bad light and derail the objectives of the scholarship scheme.
He maintained that the obligation owed them would be met as well as the regular payment of their tuition fees and In-Training Allowances (ITAs).
He said: “Study hard so that anybody you know will not go through what you went through. You can change the narrative, you can create a legacy that will out-last you and the region, or maybe, at the barest minimum, your village, but I think you should aim beyond Niger Delta, aim to be the best in the world, it is possible.”
Earlier in his speech, the President of NAPASW, Lucky Ukueku, thanked Dikio for his encouragement and for giving them opportunity to air their views, stating that it was impactful and educational.
He appealed to him to review the welfare status of the amnesty students in their respective schools, among other things.