The Ministry of Education has asked public universities that charged more than the 15% approved fees to refund the extra amount paid to their students.
The directive comes after the Minister of Education, Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum, held a meeting with management of some public universities and the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC) on Thursday over agitations that some universities including the University of Ghana were charging more than the approved fees.
In an interview on Citi FM, the Public Relations Officer of the Ministry of Education, Kwasi Kwarteng said “the expectation is that, any person that paid more than the approved fees should have his or her money refunded and this, the University authorities agreed to. The approved fee is 15% per charge so if you charge anybody more than that, it is only fair that you make a refund”.
When asked about what sanctions will be imposed on universities that fail to comply with the directive, the Public Relations Officer indicated that “we don’t believe it will get to that point”.
He added that, the universities have laws that govern their operations and should inform them about how they charge their fees adding that, the Ministry based on that, reminds them to stay within the confines of the laws.
In a related development, a member of the Communications team of the University of Ghana, Prof. Ransford Gyampo argued that, the University did not charge higher fees as has been circulated in social media.
He added: “we (the University of Ghana) have in our custody ACT 1080, the Act of Parliament which provides the base rate we should use in calculating our fifteen percent. We (The University of Ghana) used the base rate communicated to us by Parliament to calculate our fifteen percent”.
Meanwhile, the National Union of Ghana Students (NUGS) has described the justification provided by the University of Ghana as unfair for an increment in its fees for the 2022/2023 academic year.
Tertiary institutions were directed by the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC) to increase their fees by 15%, a decision kicked against by various student groups.
The student groups believe the public tertiary institutions increased the fees by more than the required percentage.
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