Uganda will provide universal free education to poor secondary school students – beginning next month, education ministry officials have said according to BBC Online Friday.
But the education minister insists that the programme – the first in East Africa – will only be accorded to high performing students.
Uganda is receiving donor support to implement the free education project. The Japanese government will provide teaching expertise while the African Development Bank will give a grant to fund the construction of schooling facilities.
President Yoweri Museveni pledged to help needy high school students during his re-election campaign last year.
Many students have been dropping out of secondary school because of the high cost of school fees.
Education experts in the capital, Kampala, say the demand for secondary schools has been high since the government introduced free primary education in 1997, but government facilities are limited.
Only 40 per cent of the 350.000 primary school graduates in the country are absorbed into secondary schools each year.
An estimated 100.000 students are expected to be enrolled into the programme that begins in February, BBC noted.