Tag: cries

  • Cries of slum children (2)

    Cries of slum children (2)

    The United Nations Education Science and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) recently revealed that  there are about 10.5 million Nigerian children that are out of school. This, according to the organization, is the largest population of such Out of School Children (OSC)  anywhere on earth.  In fact, the report said Nigeria accounts for 47 percent of the world’s population of OSC. In comparison, the entire population of Libya and Liberia is 10,496,000 while the population of OSC in Nigeria is approximately 10,500,000. INNOCENT DURU in this report, examines how developments in some Lagos slums contribute to the rising number of OSC in  the country  and the implications for the attainment of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 4 which seeks to ensure an inclusive and quality education for all and promote lifelong learning.

    The dream of Atuku Aminat, a Senior Secondary School (SSS) 3 student  of completing her secondary education and proceeding to higher institution is hanging in the balance. For some time now, the 19-year-old has been out of school and uncertain of returning to school anytime soon to at least participate in the first term examination that is coming up in a week from the date of this publication.  “ I am in a fix. My education and future is in danger. My poor parents have laboured hard to bring me this far but is this how my academic dreams will end? Does it mean I will not complete secondary school not to talk of proceeding to higher institution?” Aminat who desires to study accountancy in the university asked rhetorically.

    Aminat,  a resident of Otodogbame slum in Lekki area of Lagos State, had had a smooth academic life until  the community was allegedly invaded by touts suspected to be land grabbers and armed security men recently.

    In the process, the buildings made of bamboo, wood and roofing sheets were reportedly set ablaze by the invaders leaving the people homeless.  At the end of the day, Aminat and her colleagues had their school uniforms, notebooks, textbooks, sandals and other valuables  burnt to ashes making it impossible for them to go to school.

    “I was planning to write my final exams but there is no hope for me as we speak now because of the condition that my parents have found themselves.  All the materials I was gathering to prepare for WAEC and NECO exams were burnt during the attack. My academic future is in danger right now because my parents have lost their means of livelihood.  They have no means of providing money for us to go to school again.

    “It has been pretty difficult for my siblings and I as our parents can hardly put food on the table for us.  Different humanitarian groups have been bringing relief materials for us. They bring snacks and medical supplies for us but the snacks don’t go round. Many of us always go about in empty stomach if the ration doesn’t get to us.  We are really dying of hunger and unsure of what the future holds in stock for us,”  Aminat said.

    Aside from the agony of being out of school, Aminat relived an ugly experience she had while escaping through  a river in the community.

    “Before the invaders set our houses on fire, they shot from time to time into the air forcing us to scamper to safety. The nearest and safest place we could run to was the river. We all ran into it and started using boats to escape from the looming danger.

    “When we were struggling with the boat, we saw the dead bodies of some of our neighbours and friends floating on the river. They also tried to escape through the river but their boats capsized and they died in the river. Many of them were not used to life on water. The sight haunts most of us till date. We will never forget that day.”

    Aminat’s case and that of her peers in Otodogbame unarguably account for the rising incident of OSC in the land.  According to the UNESCO, over the last decade, Nigeria’s exponential growth in population has put immense pressure on the country’s resources and already overstretched public services and infrastructure. With children under 15 years of age accounting for about 45 per cent of the country’s population, the burden on education and other sectors has become overwhelming.

    “Forty per cent of Nigerian children aged 6-11 do not attend any primary school with the Northern region recording the lowest school attendance rate in the country, particularly for girls. Despite a significant increase in net enrollment rates in recent years, it is estimated that about 4.7 million children of primary school age are still not in school.

    “Increased enrollment rates have also created challenges in ensuring quality education and satisfactory learning achievement as resources are spread more thinly across a growing number of students. It is not rare to see cases of 100 pupils per teacher or students sitting under trees outside the school building because of the lack of classrooms,” the organisation said.

    Similar to Aminat’s case is that of 15-year-old Peace Whefoude  whose hope of taking part in the forthcoming   Junior Secondary School (JSS) 3 examination is dicey.

    The visibly worried girl said: “ I have been out of school since our building was set ablaze. All my textbooks, notebooks, uniforms and other things that I was using in school were burnt. I did not bring out an ordinary pen from the house because the attack was sudden and severe.

    “The fire moved with the speed of wind forcing all of us to run into a nearby river. We jumped into a boat and started paddling in a disorganised manner because we were not coordinated. At a point, the boat wanted to capsize as it was being tossed around by the wave. I was scared and thought my end had come. Luckily I escaped unscathed but several others were not so lucky.”

    The story was not different when The Nation met Nasu Coleth, a 15-year-old SS1 pupil. She said: “I am worried that I am out of school for no just reason. The fact that exams are going to be starting soon gives me nightmare. I can’t imagine missing exams or dropping out of school. I am eager to go to school every morning but I don’t have school uniform,  and books again. They were all burnt during the attack.  I also have two brothers who are also out of school.

    “This has put our academic dreams in danger. I am also yet to overcome the psychological trauma that I suffered after seeing the dead bodies of some of our neighbours that drowned in the river while trying to escape from the raging fire and sporadic gunshots by security operatives.”

    For Kpose Juliet another  SSS 1 pupil, the feeling of being a refugee continuously gives her headache. “We have become refugees in our land. We have been sleeping in the open since they burnt our houses. This has opened us up to unhindered mosquito bites and harsh weather conditions. Unfortunately, there is no hospital that we can go to for treatment.

    “It is only when humanitarian groups come here with doctors that we get medical help. They check and give us drugs free of charge. We don’t have shelter, we don’t have access to medical services and above all, can’t go to school. It is disheartening. Our psyche is daily affected by all this,” she said.

    The youth leader of the community, Ahisu Celestine, claimed that they have been living in the community for more than 100 years before the invasion. He said: “Some people aided by security operatives invaded the community and killed two of our members. Thereafter, they came back one night and started setting fire on the buildings. A woman that was carrying a few days old baby had to abandon her child in the house and run away. Luckily, security operatives saw the child when he was crying and brought him out before fire could reach him.  Thereafter, they went to the press to claim that they rescued a baby from fire incident. Whereas, they were the ones that set the house on fire and forced the mother to run away.

    “It was not only the woman that ran away. Everybody started to run for his dear life and the only safe place that people could run to was the river.  As people that are used to doing our daily activities on water, we didn’t find it difficult to cope with the turbulence of the  river. But some people from other parts of the country and neighbouring countries that were not used to life on the river did  not find it convenient escaping through the river.  Many of them drowned in the river and were later brought out by some people from neighbouring communities who came with boats to rescue the rest of us.”

    Ahisu described the invasion as  war-like “because the security operatives were shooting sporadically.  The children were seriously traumatised because they had never witnessed such a ferocious attack in their lives. Many of them fell ill thereafter and are yet to overcome the shock till today.  I have taken my wife and my children out of Lagos State to where their security is guaranteed.”

    Like the other children, Ahisu said: “My children have also not been going to school since then. They can’t go to school because their uniforms, textbooks, notebooks, results and everything about their education were burnt during the attack. Besides, the parents’ means of livelihood have been destroyed and as a result, they lack the resources to provide new ones for them.  Hardworking men and women have been turned to indolent people. The primary concern is how the children would have something to eat and survive. Education can come thereafter.”

    Members of the Nigeria Slum/Informal Settlement Initiative who were seen giving snacks  to the disoriented children expressed disappointment about the children’s predicament.

    One of them, who did not want his name in print, said: “We are an international organisation providing assistance to poor people in slums. We have been coming here to give food and medical support to the children and their parents because the condition they are in presently is condemnable. As you can see, they have no shelter anymore and have to sleep in the open where mosquitoes feast on their bodies that have been deprived of good food. I find it disappointing that the education of the children is not even considered in all these. This is why some children get derailed in life. Something should be done about this.”

    Aside from the Otodogbame where all the children are out of school, findings also showed that the number of OSC  in Makoko, a sprawling slum in Yaba area of the state, is also high.

    When The Nation visited the area, a  large number of half naked school age children were found moving about the riverine community when their mates were in school. While some were hawking different ware on the rivers using wooden boats, some others vivaciously frolicked around.

    One of them, Segun, said he has never gone to school because his parents never enrolled him.

    The 10 year old said: “I don’t go to school. I do see some of my mates going to school but I have never gone to school. My parents have never taken me to school. The only place my mother takes me to is the market where we hawk food. When we come back from the market, the only thing I do is to play around the community and eat.”

    Kona, a 14-year-old boy who paddles boat to earn a living also said: “ I  stopped going to school after completing primary six. The simple reason for this is because my parents couldn’t pay my school fees again.  I wasn’t even going to school every day when I was in the primary school because the money wasn’t there for my parents to pay my bills.  This was why I decided to take to the job of paddling boats to earn a living.  I would have loved to continue with my education if my parents had the means. As it is now, I don’t see myself going back to school.”

    Ajara, a teenage fish seller, told The Nation that she lost interest in education when the parents always failed to pay her fees.

    She said: “I was tired of a situation where one would go to school today and stay back at home for another two or three days before the parents would have money to pay. Instead of wasting my time at home, I decided to be hawking fish. I don’t have to wait for when my parents would bring money before I eat again. Education is good but I don’t think it is meant for poor people like us.”

    Some of the school owners in the community also attested to the fact that a large number of the children are still out of school in spite of their intervention. The proprietor of Holy Ghost Primary School, Joseph Omni said, even though schools are springing up in the area, many children are still out of school. He noted that many who are even in school don’t come to school all the time because of their parents’ inability to pay the paltry sum of N50 that he charges every day.

    “ The pupils here don’t pay school fees per term as you have it in other places. If you ask them to pay every term, they will not come to school again. Here, I charge N50 per day and as little as this money is, many parents still find it difficult to pay.  From time to time, you will find some of the children not coming to school because the parents didn’t have money to give them.

    “In spite of this, we still urge them to come to school.  If you don’t encourage them to come, they will relax and not come to school again.  It will even surprise you to know that I am the one that goes to their homes to bring them to school in the morning  and take them back after closing hours.  I have a boat and a driver that goes to their homes to bring them. If you don’t do that, they will not come to school because the cost of  boarding boats to school and going back home is even more than what they would pay in school.”

    He added: “The same thing applies in the secondary school where   I charge each pupil a paltry sum of N1,500 a month.  Most of their parents can’t afford this. All that their parents  do at the end of every month is to send the sum of N500  instead of the N1,500 that they are supposed to pay. Instead of sending them away, we still accommodate them just to make sure that they do not drop out of school.  I have four teachers working in the primary section.  At the end of some months, we may not generate more than N20,000. This is what I will share among the teachers and myself.”

    The story took an amusing but a more pathetic note when The Nation met  a teacher  of another school in the community.  The encounter opened up the depth of poverty in the environment and the sordid darkness surrounding the academic lives of the children. The teacher in EPP Halleluyah Agbojedo Nursery and Primary School, Joseph Godonu, sadly noted that many parents who have many children in the school often come to beg that two of the  children should be allowed to pay N70 a day instead of the N100 for both.

    “Many parents can’t send their kids to school because they have many children. What they do is to send one or two of the children to school and leave the others at home until they are old enough to become apprentices.

    “Some of these parents can’t afford to pay the sum of N50 that we charge as daily fee. There are some that would even plead that we should be taking N70 for their two children because they can’t afford N50 for each child. We don’t turn such parents away because if we do, their education will crash. We are here to help arrest the incidence of having children dropping out of school.”

    Decrying the plight of the children, a rights activist and Executive Director, Centre for Children’s Health, Education, Orientation and Protection (CEE-HOPE), Betty Abba, blamed the rising cases of OSC on the state of the economy. She said: ‘’The number of OSC is on  a sharp increase due to the general recession in the country. It’s a hard time for children generally and for many economically hard-hit parents, education is no longer a priority. It’s sad because that means Nigeria will yet retain the unenviable position as having the highest number of out-of-school children globally. It’s sadder still because I don’t see any serious or concerted effort by the government in terms of providing palliatives towards boosting school retention for affected children and families.”

    She regretted that some government policies and exercises have thrown thousands of children out of school. “Schools have been demolished in the informal housing, which government likes to call shanties; meanwhile it is not providing alternatives or boosting the grossing housing deficit. It’s naturally not possible for families sleeping outside or under the bridges to contemplate education for their children when they have no idea where their next meals would be coming from.  It’s a terrible time for so many children in Lagos,” she said.

    Speaking on the free education policy of various government’s in the country, Abba said:  “As far as I know, there is no such thing as free education. In the public schools across the country laying claim to free universal education, the fact is that parents still pay heavily for school materials such as uniforms, exercise books, text books and of course the ubiquitous school levies. Many parents grappling with inability to feed their children do not have the luxury of such expenses. It’s not the ideal, but that is the reality.

    “If government, corporate bodies, and ngos can help with the supply of these things, it will make a lot of difference in school enrolment. “We have seen the difference that N1,000 can make in the realisation of an indigent child’s educational dream, and in setting him/her on the path to greatness. The more children we are able and willing to put in school, the better for those children and the better and safer for all of us as a society. Again, that is the reality.

    “My ngo has  provided scholarship to about 50 children in four states in this new school year and hope to increase it with time. We also organise summer classes for both in-school and out-of-school or pre-school children in addition to several educational and developmental programmes. We provided summer classes for one month for about 200 children in two Lagos slums (Makoko and Monkey Village) last holiday season and hope to increase it this year.”

    She regretted that the country may not attain the SDG  goal 4 of the United Nation with the present situation. “We need to rake up the state of our education. Education is not yet for all in Nigeria, and that way, we cannot have prosperity for all.

    ‘’When children drop out of school, their lives slide down the sloppy road to destruction: drugs, crimes, teenage pregnancy, child marriage, teenage prostitution or a regression to plain under-performing life as an illiterate or semi-illiterate. Nothing equates education and no words can truly equate the loss of it in a modern, complex and competitive world. A country that doesn’t prioritise education and human capacity development is simply dead on arrival in our times.

    “Therefore, governments at all levels should make education compulsory for every child, enforce free universal basic education and ensure that every child is in school. Boost school retention by subsiding school fees and levies, very importantly, provide school meals. Our governments must not only live by rhetorics but must march words with action.”

    The Lagos State Government has however restated its commitment to the total upgrading of schools in the state, especially those  in the slums.

    Rising from an intensive three-day retreat for members of the State Executive Council and legislators from the Senate, House of Representatives and State House of Assembly, held at the Eko Hotels and Suites in Victoria Island, with the theme, “Good Governance In A Recession”, the state government said there was need to upgrade the quality of schools through training and re-training of teachers, as well as improving the infrastructure.

    In another breath, the state government, through the Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation (WAPA), said it has been paying the school fees of many vulnerable children in the state and also dealing with people who take pleasure in abusing children.

    The Commissioner of WAPA,  Hon. Lola Akande, made the remark during the celebration of this year’s World Orphans Day held at Alausa,  Ikeja. Akande, who was represented by the Director Child Development,  Mrs Alaba Fadairo, said: “We became focused upon the enactment of Child’s Rights Law and embarked on various initiatives over the years to make the Lagos child abuse-free by creating awareness distributing child’s rights law, Yellow cards to offenders, distributing suggestion boxes in various public primary and secondary schools, daily reports  through the ministry’s help-lines, interventions on reported cases, rescue  of abused children and payment of school fees and hostel fees for orphans and vulnerable children\abused children. Our ministry is about family and child development while helping to preserve families. We  work to aid families of widows, families with single mothers and other families at the risk of disintegration.”

  • Cries of slum children (1)

    Cries of slum children (1)

    The youths, children inclusive are often said to be the leaders of tomorrow. But for many children of school ages at Ijora Badia, a shanty community in Lagos State and several other impoverished communities across the country,  the saying appears to be a ruse. Their despondent feeling is borne out of the sordid darkness that surrounds their inalienable right to basic education which they actually need to attain leadership position in the future. They were all crestfallen as they shared their predicament with The Nation.The female children among them gave a mind boggling account of how they have become  soft targets for rapists who allegedly infect some of them with HIV and how some of those impregnated by the hooligans once resorted to feeding pigs with  their unwanted babies because they lacked the means of  taking care of them.  INNOCENT DURU reports.

    It was a weekday and the time was noon when pupils in primary and secondary schools were expected to be immersed in their studies. But 14-year-old Risi Taiwo wasn’t in school. She was found gamboling around her place of abode-  one of the make-shift tents constructed beside a rail line by her people and other neighbours who had their houses at Ijora Badia demolished recently.

    Even though, she looked excited as she ambled around, Risi’s heart was filled with burning  anger and frustration.  Before you ask why, Risi said: “I am sad because I have been out of school for more than a year and I am not sure if I will have the opportunity of  seeing the four walls of classroom again. This is because my mother who was responsible for my education died shortly after our house was demolished. I am now with my aunt who is also not finding life easy with her family.

    “My future, I must say, is bleak because I have not been doing anything since I stopped going to school. I don’t think I can achieve my dream of having a  better  life than my late mother. I am not however alone in this mess. Several other children in this community are also out of school and just aimlessly loitering around the area without any idea of what the future holds for them. We are marching backward in life and could be worse off than our parents who also did not go to school.”

    Aside from Risi, findings showed that the incidence of dropping out of school among children of school age in the area and adjoining impoverished communities is geometrically rising. Checks showed that this is largely fuelled by myriads of  policies that are inconsiderate  of the children’s education and the economic recession that has made it difficult for many parents to fend for their children.

    Our correspondent who visited Ijora Badia reported that the environment falls short of where  human beings should dwell in. The tents which were littered with refuse and human excreta are made of trampoline and wood without any covering to shield the inhabitants from harsh weather conditions and external aggression. It was therefore not surprising when some of the girls said the environment has exposed them to all manners of sexual assaults that have compounded their academic woes. Evidence of this manifested in the manners the miscreants lustfully harassed the girls in the course of taking our correspondent round the community.

    Risi  shared her disgusting experience of sexual assault thus: “We are daily exposed to unimaginable atrocities. This is particularly worse for us (the females) because evil minded men within and outside the community exploit our conditions by sexually abusing us with impunity. They storm our tents late at night and  mess up with us. This would not have been the case if we had been going to school. If we had been going to school, they would not have the opportunity of monitoring us all day and waiting till night to sexually molest us.

    “My case is about the worse in this whole environment because I was deflowered by my blood brother.  He raped me severally and when I couldn’t bear it again, I summoned courage and reported his atrocities to my mother before she died.  When I told her about the incident, she took me to a place where a sacrifice was done to prevent the consequences that my brother’s  atrocity could bring upon the family. My brother thereafter ran away and as we speak, his whereabouts are unknown.  This is something I don’t like to reflect on because it refreshes my sorrow.”

    Much as she tried to put the atrocities of her brother behind her, Risi said the menace of  other rapists kept the memory alive in her consciousness. “I was battling with putting my past behind me when a boy in the neighbourhood recently sneaked into where I was lying and wanted to rape me. I gave him the fight of his life because I was ready to die than to cowardly allow him have his way. He shamefully left when he couldn’t overpower me.

    “That has not stopped all manners of sexual harassment from others. Like I said earlier, I am not alone in this. That is how several girls in my shoes are either daily raped or lured with peanuts because they are out of school and roaming the street without focus. Unfortunately, most of these evil men do this nonsense without protection. This is why abortions, unwanted pregnancies and incidences of abandoned children are very high here. I wish to leave this environment but where and to whom shall I go to? ”

    One of the children in Risi’s shoes is Toyosi Oreatan who has also been out of school for more than one year without any hope of returning to the classroom anytime soon.

    Like Risi, 12-year-old Toyosi began her story  by  narrating how she narrowly escaped being raped in the dead of the night by a rapist who sneaked into her tent.

    “I was sleeping when I suddenly observed somebody that covered himself with my mother’s wrapper. Initially, I thought it was my mother but when he tried doing some nasty things with me, I woke and shouted. My mum quickly woke up and held him. She eventually allowed him to go because he is one of the boys in the neighbourhood.

    “I have been seriously devastated by that incident because, aside from worrying about my education that is hanging in the balance, I have also been feeling insecure. I hardly sleep with my two eyes closed these days because of the fear that somebody could pounce on me with the intention of raping me. ”

    Toyosi’s mother, Lamide, told The Nation that the hooligan that wanted to rape her daughter removed the wrapper with which he covered himself from her (the mother) body without her knowledge. “I used the wrapper to cover myself but he removed and used it to cover himself without my knowledge. He confessed that he did that to make my daughter assume that I was the one lying beside her and  with that, he would have gone far before my daughter  would realise what was happening,” she said.

    Toyosi equally blamed her plight on the fact that she has dropped out of school. “I have not gone to school for more than one year. I stopped going to school after my mother’s means of livelihood was affected by the demolition of our house and several others last year.  My school uniform, result, birth certificate and several other valuables were trapped in the house during the demolition.  I just completed my primary education at Foursquare Nursery and Primary School and about entering secondary school when the incident happened.

    “I have been at home since then doing nothing. I feel very bad whenever I see some of my  friends going or returning from school. At times, some of them would come saying ‘Toyosi, when would you go back to school or has your academic life ended at ordinary primary level’?  I always shed tears each time I see them not to even talk of when they make such  remarks that deeply exacerbate the mental and psychological agony I am going through.

    “I certainly want to go back to school but I don’t know how this can happen again because my mother doesn’t have what it takes to pay my bills. You can see where we have been staying  since they demolished our building. We have been finding it difficult to feed not to talk of having the money to go to school.”

    Asked why she didn’t register in a public school where education is free, she added: “My mum was  paying N15, 000 as school  fee every  term  when I was in primary school. But she doesn’t have the wherewithal to pay my fees again after the incident. Because she could not raise money to train me in private school, she decided to take me to a public school but she still couldn’t  raise the sum of N3, 500 that was required to produce a new birth certificate that was demanded for my registration. She also didn’t have money to buy books and school uniform for me. It is disheartening for me.”

    Toyosi’s dishevelled and traumatised mother recounted how the daughter weeps always for being out of school. She said: “Toyosi cries to me almost on a daily basis about her education but there is nothing I can do for now. I have never wished that my children should drop out of school but the condition I have found myself now is beyond what I ever envisaged in life.

    “I have three children who I cater for all alone. I was managing and doing my best to train them in  school until the demolition exercise affected our accommodation and my means of livelihood. I attempted making Toyosi to continue her education in a public school but they asked us to bring birth certificate and also pay some other monies for her registration. But I didn’t have the money to pay.

    “I couldn’t even afford to pay the N3,500  demanded by those who wanted to produce the birth certificate not to talk about having the means of buying her school uniform, sandals and books. That is why she has been at home for the past one year. I want Toyosi to go back to school and have never given up on this.”

    Another distraught member of the community is Stephen Happiness. The 15-year-old also said that she stopped going to school after her mum died last year. “I had concluded my Junior Secondary School (JSS) education and heading to the senior class when she died. I desired being a science student because of my desire to work in the medical circles. I am presently living with my step father who does not have the means of paying my bills. I don’t know my father. My mother told me that he left the house when I was only two weeks old and never came back.

    “So, I have no helper anywhere. I only look up to God for mercy. I desire going back to school but there is just nobody to assist me. This has been a huge burden in my heart all along because my ambition of going to the university appears unattainable,” she said.

    Aside from her education that is hanging in the balance, Happiness said: “The pains about my academic situation  are compounded by the situation we are presently. We have been living in these tents that we constructed by the railway lines after our houses were demolished. It has been a hell on earth living here for most of us.

    “We have our bath in the open by merely wearing singlets and boxer shots. This exposes so many young girls like me to series of sexual molestation.  Many female children in the community that dropped out of school get lured with as little as N500 by depraved men. They sleep with them, impregnate and infect many with sexually transmitted diseases including HIV.

    “Health workers come here from time to time to carry out tests on people and have on many occasions found many girls to be infected. They have been here today and left barely less than 30 minutes before I met you. As I am talking to you now, a number of my colleagues have been raped and impregnated by hoodlums.”

    She added: “Some of them have put to bed without having anybody taking care of them. To make both ends meet, a number of them now sleep around with different men. Some of these girls dump their babies in the bush and canals out of frustration. Some deliberately put their babies where pigs will easily eat them up.

    “In fact, I have seen pigs eating up a newly born baby with the placenta intact and the body covered with fresh blood. I was shell shocked when I saw it. This is one of the consequences of dropping out of school.Many of us are not happy that we are out of school. We feel sad about it because we know the abuses that come with lying idle in an open place like this. I want to go back to school and I will thankfully appreciate anybody that helps me to actualise my dream.”

    Also bemoaning her untimely exit from school,  Bidemi Akintayo,  said:  “I stopped going to school because my parents  lost their means of livelihood and couldn’t pay my bills in the school anymore. They have nothing to fall back on since they both lost their means of livelihood. This has made life unbearable for the entire family. The priority for them is how we can manage to eat a square meal in a day. For all they care, education is secondary because survival is the primary concern here.

    “I tried registering at public schools but the money wasn’t there to do the initial registration. I want to go back to school. My frustration right now is that my chance of seeing the four walls of classroom is remote. I don’t know what next I will do with my life because I don’t want to marry yet not to talk of becoming a single mother that will be living miserably with the baby.I have seen what my friends in that condition going through hell. I don’t want that to happen to me. I have the ambition of going to the university and it would be a lifetime dent if I don’t fulfill that dream.”

    The visibly disturbed teenager added: “I have been out of school for more than a year and managing the little my parents  provide for me because I don’t want my life to be messed up like that of many friends and colleagues of mine. I can’t count the number of my friends and other girls in the neighbourhood that their lives have taken the turn for the worse after they were impregnated by hooligans. Some of them are now hungry single mothers who survive by prostituting. Prostitution is the only means by which they could fend for themselves and their babies since they have no capital to to start any business.

    “Some of the girls who do not want to be seen as prostitutes keep a multiple boyfriends who they sleep with and get peanuts to take care of themselves and their babies. Some of them sleep with men for as low as N500 without even protecting themselves. This is why the scourge of HIV is prevalent here. After seeing the hardship that these single mothers pass through taking care of themselves and their babies, some other girls deliberately  dump their unwanted new born babies in canals and bush paths where pigs eat them up. They do it early in the morning to prevent people from rescuing the babies. It is on a few occasions that  people pick up such children and hand them over to the appropriate authorities.

    For Emmanuel Okoro,  leaving school at an early age now comes with the burden of hustling to  support the family.  The  15-year-old said that he  stopped going to school when he  was in the Junior Secondary School (JSS).  Today, he washes dish in a local restaurant to augment  what the parents provide for the upkeep of the family.

    “I wish to continue with my education but my parents don’t have the resources to train me. I wash plates at a local restaurant  and get paid between N600 and N700 every day. I don’t keep the money or spend it. I always hand everything I get  over to my mother to support the family. I don’t know how long I will do this because there is no hope of better tomorrow. Darkness is all I can see since my education that would have  helped me to be enlightened and empowered is jeopardised. I have always had low self-esteem since I stopped going to school.

    ‘’This is worse when students of my age mates come to buy food at the canteen and ask me to help them wash their plates. I feel humiliated doing this but I must do it to get paid at the end of the day. If I were going to school, they wouldn’t have had the opportunity of asking me to do such. I really feel bad when I see children like me going to school and talking about how they will become one thing or the other in life. I also want to go back to school and would be glad if anybody could come to my help before my brain rusts.”

    The case of Ogba Mary, a mother of four, also triggers emotions. None of her  children has ever gone to school or has any hope of going to  school anytime soon. Besides,  the whereabouts of the husband who could have been supporting the family is unknown . So, the wife and the children depend on whatever they get from kind-hearted people.

    “My first child is six years old and she has never gone to school. It is the same thing with the second and third who are four  and two years respectively. The fourth one is just a few days old. For a very long time now the father has abandoned the family. We don’t know his whereabouts and he doesn’t even bother to call to know how we are coping. I am a petty trader and I must confess that what I get from the business is not enough to feed myself not to talk of feeding the children. I depend largely on what I get from people to take care of my children. When help comes, we eat and when we get nobody to help us, we manage whatever we get.

    “With this, you can see that education is the last thing that I will concern myself with. i am worried about it but there is nothing that I can do to  solve the problem now. If God wishes, they will later go to school. But I want them to go to school because the world has no place for illiterates again. If I didnt get better than my parents,

    I want them to be better than I am and education is actually a key to this.”

    One of the women leaders in the community who identified herself simply as Kemi noted that little children in the community are not spared by the sexual perverts in the area. “The female children are not finding life easy in the community at all. The female children that I am talking about include children as little as one year and two years old. If your little baby is not within your vicinity  for five minutes, you can be sure that some heartless men have taken her to one corner and forcing their fingers into their private parts.

    “It is  a regular occurrence here and I can tell you that the security operatives here are always inundated with the reports. This happens majorly because the children don’t go to school and always roam about. If they were in school, such depraved men will not see them let alone having the opportunity of sexually abusing them.”

    If that is the case for little female children, Kemi said  the situation is worse for  the older ones.

    “They (the older ones)  are raped from time to time and put in the family way without anybody helping them. The rapists invade their tents at night and rape them at will. The touts don’t rape older women. They only use dangerous weapons to attack and rob them of their valuables. But they rape the younger ones. Some of the touts even come from outside this community because they know the girls have no shelter and defenseless.

    ‘’This is why many of the girls have contracted HIV. Health workers are not unaware of the kind of sodomic practices here and that is why they come here on a regular basis to test the children. In the course of carrying out tests on the children, a number of them have tested positive to HIV and once this is discovered, such children are taken to the hospital for medical care. It is a worrisome development we have at hand and we hope something can be done to rescue us.  The education of the children should be given the urgent attention it requires to save their future and that of the society.”

    The males that dropped out of school, according to her, have started taking to all manners of vices. “Some of them have taken to drug abuse, petty stealing and gambling. Some of  them even sell hard drugs. You can see them all over the place. From there, they will grow to become hardened criminals. It is only a few of them that are God-fearing that do odd jobs such as picking condemned metals to sell. Some are now bus conductors because they have to fend for themselves since their parents can’t train them in school anymore. This is a time bomb waiting to explode. The only solution is for the children to return to school and have a sense of belonging in the society,” she  said.

     

  • OSUN POLL:Hues and cries over militarisation

    OSUN POLL:Hues and cries over militarisation

    PERHAPS for years to come, history will not forget in a hurry, President Goodluck Jonathan for introducing military into election monitoring in the country. He started with Edo and continued in Ondo, Anambra, Ekiti and now Osun.

    Jonathan, while speaking in Osun State last Saturday in the Peoples Democratic Party’s campaign rally, he declared that there would be no going back on the decision of the Federal Government to massively deploy troops in Osun for today’s election.

    The president, who was apparently reacting to the loud criticism that greeted the vast security and military deployment for the Ekiti State governorship election in June, pointed out that nothing would stop the heavy deployment of security agents in Osun State for the August 9 governorship election, adding that the deployment was targeted at safeguarding the security of the lives and property of residents during the election.

    But the president’s statement has come under criticism from those who believe that government might use the troops’ deployment to intimidate the electorate in favour of the its preferred candidate.

    They based their argument on the fact that the Federal Government had in the past used its power to subdue perceived opposition and crippled their activities on the pretence of maintaining peace and order in the past. This was evident in Ekiti where some of the leaders of the opposition were arrested and detained throughout the period of the election without any reason.

    The former Interim National Chairman of the APC, Chief Adebisi Akande, noted that the militarisation with sporadic shooting by the DSS officers everywhere in the state was meant to scare away voters and intimidate supporters of the APC.

    Akande lamented: “In the recently held governorship election in Ekiti State, hundreds of APC supporters and leaders were hounded into detention on the eve of the election only for the Federal Government to hoodwink the global community to believe that the election was free and fair when in truth, the process had been skewed in favour of the PDP in the pre-election processes.”

    Some, however, have said that President Jonathan reserves the right to ensure that the election is violent-free by deploying troops.

    Prior to today’s election in Osun, series of violent clashes between rival political parties became the order of the day. On several occasions, thugs allegedly sent by a rival party clashed with those they felt were obstacles to the chances of their party at the polls. Few unlucky members lost their lives in the fracas, while some who were fortunate escaped only with injuries.

    Condemning the deploying of troops for elections, the National Chairman and former Presidential candidate, National Action Council, NAC Dr. Olapade Agoro, warned that  the development could come back to haunt the nation.

    Agoro  explained that such an action was “not only an apparent rule of force in a democracy, but a reckless display of raw power, a condemnable intimidation of civility and a flagrant abuse of fundamental rights of the expected voters.”

    Speaking in the same vein the chairman of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), Comrade Debo Adeniran, lamented that the intervention of military men in democratic process is an aberration. Adeniran pointed out that such an action “is antithetical to the spirit of true democracy. The police should be well-equipped to provide security during elections; we shouldn’t be inviting ‘khaki boys’ from their barracks to intervene in the democratic process.”

    The human rights activist argued that the militarisation of Osun State may influence the outcome of the election and therefore urged that the soldiers should be kept in the barracks until the situation demands their coming out.

    Political pundits are of the view that if the Federal Government did not want to truncate the ongoing democratic experiment, it is necessary to be as neutral as possible and make sure that the security provided is not targeted at the intimidation and harassment of the opposition.

    By so doing, they argued that the people of Osun State will be at the liberty to vote any candidate of their choice without any molestation and intimidation.

  • APC cries out over arrest of its leaders

    •’AIG’s advert unacceptable’

    •Party queries suspects’ release

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has alerted the public to alleged plans by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led Federal Government to arrest its leaders in Osun State.

    It said the ploy was to destabilise the APC and intimidate its members and supporters ahead of Saturday’s governorship poll.

    In a statement yesterday, APC National Publicity Secretary Alhaji Lai Mohammed said the arrests were earlier scheduled to start tomorrow, but began yesterday following the success of the party’s rally in Osogbo.

    The APC said: “The mammoth crowd that turned out for the rally today (yesterday) destabilised the PDP and the Federal Government and they fast tracked the arrest of our leaders in all local government areas.

    “Already, a special team from Abuja has arrived in Osogbo solely for this purpose and, at least, one of our leaders, Hon. Oke, has been arrested. The arrest and intimidation of opposition members put a question mark on President Goodluck Jonathan’s assurance to the international community that the Osun election will be free and fair.

    “As we have always said, election is a process. Rigging is not restricted to the voting day alone. Arrest and intimidation of the opposition ahead of voting constitute rigging. Therefore, by engaging in the mass arrest of our leaders in Osun and deploying highly-partisan security agencies in the state, the Federal Government has kick-started the process of rigging Saturday’s election.

    “We are alerting election observers, the international community and all Nigerians to the evil machinations of the PDP and the Federal Government for the Osun election. We urge all men and women of conscience to prevail on those who are bent on fomenting anarchy in Osun State to give peace a chance. We ask for nothing more than a level playing field for all candidates in the election. We want the election to be a celebration of democracy rather than a trigger for chaos.”

    The APC, in a statement by its Osun State Publicity Director, Kunle Oyatomi, has demanded the withdrawal of an advert running on the National Television Authority (NTA), Osogbo, placed by the Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Zone 11, David Omojola, saying it amounted to “an official threat of assassination from the AIG’s office”.

    NTA-Osogbo has been running an advert in Ijesha dialect, warning one SOJI not to put his life on the line in the process of fighting against electoral fraud.

    According to the APC, the “obvious reference” in that advert was Governor Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola, whose middle name is ADESOJI.

    In a letter dated August 4 to the AIG, the APC demanded that in the alternative to withdrawing the advert, the AIG should publicly clarify that the governor was not the object of the advert.

    It said Aregbesola would never surrender to intimidation, fraud or threat of assassination in his fight against evil and injustice.

    The APC alleged that four suspects, who were caught thumbprinting ballot papers in Akoda, Ede, had been released by the military.

    The suspects were apprehended by members of a vigilance group and handed over to the military.

    According to the APC, it was discovered yesterday that the suspects had been released.

    The party said some suspected PDP thugs, who were arrested last Saturday in possession of guns, had been released by the police.

    It said: “During the PDP’s rally in Osogbo last Saturday, the police were reported to have arrested some PDP thugs caught with guns and other ammunition in their possession. But as you read this, the thugs have also been released.

    “The big question is why should the military and the police release suspects caught in illegal acts, who are supposed to be in custody, preparatory for court charges.

    “Secondly, in the case of Akoda, the question is who gave the suspects ballot papers, if not the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) that is supposed to be in exclusive possession of ballot papers?

    “There appears to be a synergy among the military, police, PDP and INEC to rig Saturday’s election. The APC, therefore, demands explanations on why the suspects arrested in Akoda and Osogbo were released by security agencies to continue their criminality.

    “INEC must provide Nigerians with an answer on how the criminals broke into its storehouse and stole the ballot papers they were thumb printing?

    Nigerians and the world should not be deceived. There is a criminal conspiracy of the highest pedestal of the security agencies, the PDP, INEC and the government in Abuja to criminally bastardise democracy and destroy the electoral process through coordinated fraud.

    “No matter what the combination of these forces do, APC will prevail and win the election on Saturday with the people’s mandate.”