 National Association of Nigerian Students have joined order stakeholders to urge the House of Representatives to amend the Student Loan Act in order to allow easy access by students who desire to apply for it. National President of the National Association of Nigerian Students, Osmar Barambu, made a call at the ongoing investigation on the need to leak into amending the Student Loan Act in Abuja. Now, Mr. Chairman, for the students, we have Section 7, Subsection 2, that is the issue of both compositions. There are some things that we want the Honourable House to look at it. Now, this student loan is mainly for us, the students, and in the constitution of that board, no student representatives there. We demand that a non-representative should be put in that board, so that at least anything that is happening will know that, yes, this is where the money is going, this is how they are doing the things, this is how the repayment will go, and a lot of things. So we demand a representative of students to be put in that board. We equally demand that the SSA to the President or Newton student should be involved in that board composition. In his remark earlier, the Speaker of the House, Honourable Abbas Thadrede, who was represented by the Deputy Speaker Benjamin Carlos, said the summit is aimed at addressing the bottlenecks that have ended students from accessing the loans over the years. We are witnessing a situation where only a privileged few can assess quality education, while the majority struggle to make ends meet. Contrarily, we cannot afford to have the majority of our citizens uneducated. The student loans are an important aspect of modern education and financing around the world. It creates access to education for students who would otherwise be unable to afford higher education or unable to study professional courses, be it for scientific development, industrialization, technological advancements, and economic growth. For student loan schemes to be successful, they must be easy to access, easy to repay, and supported by flexible exit plans so as not to overboden our young citizens and stifle their development after graduation. The Student Loans Act represents a significant turning point in the history of higher education in Nigeria in the 21st century. So, to facilitate the payment of the attrition fees, and then of course providing education for all Nigerians, how do we see the capacity of the loan to cover a significant portion of students as well as create the enabling environment for them to repay the loan?