Tag: resumption

  • Resumption blues at UNICAL

    Resumption blues at UNICAL

    Students of the University of Calabar (UNICAL) are yet to return after the management announced the beginning of the second semester. The students are asking the authorities to extend their holiday to enable them prepare for lectures. STANLEY UCHEGBU (Accounting) reports.

    The University of Calabar (UNICAL) resumed for second semester last Monday. But students are not willing to return to school. They said the break given by the management after their first semester examination was short.

    While the management did not give any reason for the “short break”, students believe that it could be a way of re-adjusting the school calendar disrupted by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike, which shut down universities for almost 11 months.

    According to the new calendar, academic activities are to begin on October 10, but the campus is in doldrums. When CAMPUSLIFE visited the campus last Monday, there were a few students around; many were yet to return to school. Visits to faculty offices showed course outlines and timetables were yet to be released.

    Some of the few students around, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, complained about the short semester break.

    “It is not up to one week we finished our first semester examination,” Sylvester Agande, 300-Level Economics student, said. A semester break should last, at least, three weeks for students to refresh and prepare for another, he added.

    Nelson Imeh, 300-Level Pure Applied Chemistry, said he was not happy with the management’s decision, saying the first semester was hectic for students.

    “I planned to go home and relax after exam, but management released the resumption date for second semester when students were yet to finish their exams. With this, we are expected to stay back on campus for the next three months,” he said. Nelson urged the management to extend the resumption date to enable students relax.

    The previous semester was stressful, said Jeremiah Eteng, a 100-Level Physics student, noting that students were hastily taken through the course outlines to make up for the lost months. “Now, we have resumed to be rushed again?  When are we going to rest?” she queried.

    Emmanuel Effiong, a Biochemistry student, said there would be pressure on students, given the management’s effort at making up for the lost period in the school calendar. He said: “With the way things are going, we would be put under pressure as they did last semester. The management should consider our plight and adjust the resumption date for to refresh our brains.”

    But an official of the Students’ Union Government (SUG), who craved for anonymity, said the management did the right thing in asking students to resume. He said: “We wasted time because of disruptions and strike. To me, the resumption is in order. When students are back, we will elect and inaugurate the parliament so that SUG can start work immediately.”

    Cynthia Ubong,  200-Level Agricultural Economics, said: “I am not interested whether the school resumes or not. I have to spend one month at home before returning to campus. I have to assist my parents, who are doing petty trading in Uyo. More so, I have to get prepared for the new semester.”

    Medical Radiography students complained about the resumption date, which they said was a deliberate attempt by the management to deny them their clinical posting that is normally done during the semester break.

    A 400-Level Radiography student, who identified himself as John Franklin, said: “If students are to resume on October 10, as ordered by the management, it simply means that we have been deprived of the mandatory clinical posting. We will return the log book given to us blank. This is not good for us because the requirement to be inducted as a radiographer is to have filled the 1000 cases of patients in the log book.”

    The management should consider extending the break for Radiography students, said Michael Essien, a 300-Level Medical Radiography student, adding: “I do not know why we are running the same calendar with other department. We are supposed to have a separate calendar like the Faculty of Law.”

    Meanwhile, the Vice-Chancellor, Prof James Epoke, has reiterated that the management would not change the resumption date. Speaking to CAMPUSLIFE after inauguration of the SUG, the VC said: “The campus has been re-opened for second semester activities and this is why we are here to inaugurate the new SUG executive members. I advise students to disregard rumour of resumption date extension.”

     

  • Mixed feelings trail OOU’s resumption

    Mixed feelings trail OOU’s resumption

    The Students’ Union Government of Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago Iwoye, Ogun State, has issued a press statement, suspending its agitation for school fees reduction after a meeting with the school management.

    A statement by the union reads: “It is painful to announce that the Students’ Union Government is suspending the on-going struggle for now. OOUites, the suspension is based on the apparent realities. Having critically looked into it, and considering the intervention of ASUU (OOU chapter), JAF and other civil society organisations, the decision was taken for the overall interest of students. Some of the issues that informed our decision was that if we continue the struggle, 2013/2014 session would be wasted.”

    The union condemned the inability of the school authority to yield to the demands of students, urging students not to lose faith with the struggle for affordable education.

    Some students of the university had criticised the Students’ Union, saying they betrayed them. Other students praised the union for taking the right decision in students’ interest.

    The President, in his statement  tagged: “Suspension,” said: “I know that mixed feelings, shock, criticisms and disappointment will follow the suspension of the struggle. I want to plead with you to please understand that the decision was taken out of pain since it is the most appropriate decision to take looking at the reality and situations. I know confidently that our struggle is not a waste of time or energy. The decision was not taken due to any financial inducement, political influence or any personal reasons.”

  • Photos: Schools resume across Nigeria

    Photos: Schools resume across Nigeria

  • Private school owners support September 22 resumption

    Private school owners support September 22 resumption

    •Query Ogun, Oyo, Ekiti, Osun for postponement

    The National Association of Private School Proprietors (NAPPS), Southwest chapter, has said primary and secondary schools in Lagos and Ondo states are free to resume today.

    It hailed Governors Babatunde Fashola and Olusegun Mimiko for being proactive in stopping the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

    At its zonal meeting in Ibadan at the weekend, NAPPS berated Oyo, Osun, Ogun, and Ekiti states for postponing the resumption date till October 6 and 8.

    A statement by NAPPS President, Southwest, Alhaja Alimi Basirat and Chairman, Lagos State branch, Chief Yomi Otubela, queried the postponement.

    They said while Oyo, Osun and Ekiti were categorical on the October 6 resumption date, Ogun NAPPS, which was absent at the meeting, did not send information on the resumption date.

    Otubela urged Governor Fashola to extend the preventive measures put in place in public schools to private schools.

  • Ebola: Much ado about schools’ resumption

    Ebola: Much ado about schools’ resumption

    Four days to the resumption of schools, many parents are still contemplating whether or not to allow their children to return. They fear over their safety from the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease (EVD). They do not believe that the Federal Government has done enough to protect pupils. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA, MEDINAT KANABE, OLUWASEUN AKINOLA, OLUWATOSIN OLAWALE AND JAYEOBA OYEFOLU OLAYINKA sampled  parents’, teachers’ and school managements’ opinions on the matter.

    As far as the Federal and some state governments are concerned, schools will resume on Monday. But many parents are not ready to allow their children return to school “this early” because of the fear of the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease (EVD). To them, more still need to be done to assure them of their children’s safety from the disease before returning to school.

    According to them, the government, which asked the schools to resume, has not done anything to guarantee pupils’ safety, despite huge resources it has allegedly deployed to fight Ebola. The sensitisation on Ebola is high nationwide, with the World Health Organisation (WHO) praising the country’s containment of the virus, despite its large population. But, as schools’ resume on Monday, there are fears among parents on the possibility of their children contracting the disease.

    Those whose children attend private schools are not leaving anything to chance; they want to know what measures the schools have adopted to guard against EVD. Initially, the Federal Government shifted the beginning of the new academic session from September 13 to October 13. Last Monday, the government made a u-turn, directing students to resume on September 22. Defending the resumption date on Tuesday, President Goodluck Jonathan noted that keeping schools closed over EVD would send wrong signal to other countries and make them treat Nigerians travelling abroad as Ebola carriers.

    Addressing reporters at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, Jonathan said government has taken adequate and globally accepted measures to check EVD epidemic in the country. Jonathan said ahead of the resumption, he had had met with and had the  promises of the governors, commissioners for health and all the states  set up machineries nationwide to manage Ebola if it turned up. Said Jonathan:  “You see one thing people don’t know and that is why all these Labour Unions NUT are threatening strike, if you are in Nigerian today, and you travel to some countries, they don’t even want you to enter the countries. Our athletes were segregated in China they had to return to the country.

    “What people don’t know is that as long as you close your institutions because of Ebola, the ambassadors that are here with us and the high commissioners send what you call dispatches to their home states about what is happening in our country every month.” “As long as we, Nigerians close all our public institutions because of Ebola, the dispatches that goes to the whole world is that Ebola is a problem in Nigeria. And as long as we declare that Ebola is a problem in Nigeria, any Nigerian who travels out will be treated as someone that has Ebola.” At a meeting in Abuja, the government and the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) harmonised positions on the September 22 date, with both identifying six steps  to make the country safe. The NMA said it yielded ground against its earlier position that schools should remain closed until thoseunder EVD surveillance are cleared. Shekarau, who represented government at the meeting, cleared the air on insinuations that the date was influenced by private school operators. “At no point did anyone influence this decision. There were reports that the private sector influenced the decision.

    That is not true,” Shekarau said, adding: “It was a unanimous decision taken after a meeting with the education commissioners, and the health ministry. The Ministry of Education also wrote to the governors to give the directive more weight.” Lagos State is championing the case. Last week, it directed teachers and proprietors of private schools to be ready for work by Monday.

    A statement by the Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Lateef Raji, premised the state’s position on the fact that there is “currently no known carrier of EVD in our state at the moment,” adding that health professionals were in agreement with government’s position. Raji said the government is committed to deploying all resources at its disposal to take into custody any person suspected to be infected with EVD, and isolate such a person for treatment

    . It warned the public to remain vigilant as the EVD still remains in other countries within the sub-region. The state recommended some measures to be taken in schools, such as training and sensitisation of pupils, vendors, teachers and non academic staff on EVD and how to avoid it; Identification of EVD focal persons in schools, who would be responsible for surveillance and health monitoring; provision of adequate environmental sanitation, including clean toilets and premises; provision of running water and soap and encouragement of frequent hand washing; sensitisation of pupils on other personal hygiene habits, like the use of handkerchiefs when sneezing or coughing; and arrangement for prompt referral of any sick person to the nearest health institution for treatment.

    The Nation found that the level of communication is high, especially between private school owners and parents on EVD and resumption. Aside the use of blood pressure monitors and wash hand basins placed outside school premises, many private schools have been communicating with parents through Short Message Service (SMS) intimating them of measures being taken to guarantee their children’s safety. A source at King of Kings private School in Okokomaiko, a Lagos suburb, who pleaded not to be mentioned, said the school management made it mandatory to brief parents through SMS every Monday and Saturday on steps being taken to reinforce their confidence. “All through the long vacation, there was hardly any week we did not send SMS to parents on what we were doing on Ebola. We kept telling them (parents) that we could not go against government’s directive as far as resumption was concerned. But we can take certain steps to reassure parents not to bother. Before the week runs out, we are also planning to meet the PTA to finalise outstanding issues against Monday,” the source said. This development, notwithstanding, did not douse parents’ apprehensions. Mr Abdulmalik Itsemiye, a father of two, whose children attend Dawah Nursery and Primary School, Jakande Estate Isolo, Lagos, agreed that children should return to school.

    According to him, the government should ensure that schools managements are educated on how to manage the situation while their pupils are in school. He said: “If the government says they should resume, they should because nobody has the assurance that Ebola will be eradicated even next month. We should just find ways to control it because sitting at home is not the best for the pupils, after all parents still take their children out to places and parties where they meet people and mix up with other children and adult.” Another parent, Mr Steven Chuks, said he would allow his children resume on one condition.

    “That the PTA should also make sure that they go round the schools before resumption proper to check if the steps taken by the school are right,” he said. He added: “It will not be easy for the PTA for sure, but they have to take it upon themselves to make sure the school is okay for resumption.” However, another parent, Boise Rita, whose children school at Laurel Nursery and Primary School, Jakande Estate Isolo, held a contrasting view.”I won’t allow my son resume anytime soon because he is still very little and cannot protect himself from others. He cannot distinguish between the sick and the healthy yet.

    Aside, I feel one should be careful with children especially, when two teachers have to watch over 15 pupils. Children tend to put their hands in their mouth every time without caution and I cannot also guarantee my child’s safety out there,” she said. She continued: “I believe many children have travelled for holidays to different parts of the country. How can one be sure that they didn’t get in contact with an Ebola patient during this time?” adding: “I don’t really know how schools can check or safeguard thousands of kids coming to school aside just washing their hands and probably talking to them. Continuous orientation about the disease and preventive measures will do.

    Above all, parents should keep talking to their children that are grown up while I suggest that those still very little should stay back at home for now.” Stating her view another parent, Mrs Lylian Nathaniel, whose four children attend Missam International Schools, Meiran, Lagos, shared with Rita’s view. “God forbid! What are they are going to read that I will allow them risk their lives when it is obvious that government is still working towards curbing the EVD. There has to be a certain measure put in place by the government because it’s like many schools are not fully ready to join in the fight against Ebola,” she said. She added: “What I mean by all this is that they do not have the wherewithal to help curb the spread of the virus and if it gets to the school, then our case would be worse than Liberia and Sierra Leone.

    I need to be very sure that this disease has been totally handled before I can hand my children out to any school. So for now, they are learning at home.” For another parent, Mrs Kareema Adefajo, October 13 date is it. Her mind, she said, has settled for the October 13 date. “No, I wouldn’t allow them resume. I will advise that schools resume on 13th October. Before then I am sure that with the Grace of God things would be different,” she said. A private school teacher, Mr. Babatunde Nurudeen, feels the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) has not been fair to their counterparts in private schools since the latter knows that their salaries would be paid. Said Nurudeen:

    “As the federal government now puts the resumption on 22nd September, teachers in public schools do not want the resumption until next year since they know that anytime school resumes the government will pay their salaries.” “In addition, our school is making some preparation for the prevention of Ebola. We have purchased the temperature scanning machine for screening visitors to the school. The school has also aquired a lot of sanitisers for washing hands as well as liquid soap. The school surroundings had been fumigated. The cleaners are also standby for frequent washing of the toilets. I personally believe that with all these in place, the school is seriously ready for resumption,” he added. Another parent, Mrs Adefolahan Oluwatoyin, is happy to see her kids return to the classroom.

    “I was so happy when it was announced that schools would resume on September 22,” Afolayan said, adding:  “This is because many of the pupils do not read at home at all. They spend most of their time watching films and chatting with friends. But with this resumption, they will focus more on their studies.” She, however, added her voice. “Concerning Ebola, the government should ensure that they provide every school with water and sanitiser. Government should also provide schools with the temperature scanning device in order to check teachers, parents and pupils’ temperature before entering the school premises. The government should appoint officials to go round schools and check if they all have the necessary facilities to curb Ebola’. For Mrs Akinbode Rachel, there was no point for children staying back at home as enough time had already been wasted. “The decision that schools should resume on 22 September is right. I say so because if allowed to stay longer, it will affect teaching and learning, as most children have spent the better part of their holidays playing around and watching films,” she said.  

    As far as the Federal and some state governments are concerned, schools will resume on Monday. But many parents are not ready to allow their children return to school “this early” because of the fear of the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease (EVD). To them, more still need to be done to assure them of their children’s safety from the disease before returning to school. According to them, the government, which asked the schools to resume, has not done anything to guarantee pupils’ safety, despite huge resources it has allegedly deployed to fight Ebola. The sensitisation on Ebola is high nationwide, with the World Health Organisation (WHO) praising the country’s containment of the virus, despite its large population. But, as schools’ resume on Monday, there are fears among parents on the possibility of their children contracting the disease.

    Those whose children attend private schools are not leaving anything to chance; they want to know what measures the schools have adopted to guard against EVD. Initially, the Federal Government shifted the beginning of the new academic session from September 13 to October 13. Last Monday, the government made a u-turn, directing students to resume on September 22. Defending the resumption date on Tuesday, President Goodluck Jonathan noted that keeping schools closed over EVD would send wrong signal to other countries and make them treat Nigerians travelling abroad as Ebola carriers. Addressing reporters at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, Jonathan said government has taken adequate and globally accepted measures to check EVD epidemic in the country.

    Jonathan said ahead of the resumption, he had had met with and had the  promises of the governors, commissioners for health and all the states  set up machineries nationwide to manage Ebola if it turned up. Said Jonathan:  “You see one thing people don’t know and that is why all these Labour Unions NUT are threatening strike, if you are in Nigerian today, and you travel to some countries, they don’t even want you to enter the countries. Our athletes were segregated in China they had to return to the country. “What people don’t know is that as long as you close your institutions because of Ebola, the ambassadors that are here with us and the high commissioners send what you call dispatches to their home states about what is happening in our country every month.”

    “As long as we, Nigerians close all our public institutions because of Ebola, the dispatches that goes to the whole world is that Ebola is a problem in Nigeria. And as long as we declare that Ebola is a problem in Nigeria, any Nigerian who travels out will be treated as someone that has Ebola.” At a meeting in Abuja, the government and the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) harmonised positions on the September 22 date, with both identifying six steps  to make the country safe. The NMA said it yielded ground against its earlier position that schools should remain closed until thoseunder EVD surveillance are cleared. Shekarau, who represented government at the meeting, cleared the air on insinuations that the date was influenced by private school operators. “At no point did anyone influence this decision. There were reports that the private sector influenced the decision. That is not true,” Shekarau said, adding: “It was a unanimous decision taken after a meeting with the education commissioners, and the health ministry.

    The Ministry of Education also wrote to the governors to give the directive more weight.” Lagos State is championing the case. Last week, it directed teachers and proprietors of private schools to be ready for work by Monday. A statement by the Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Lateef Raji, premised the state’s position on the fact that there is “currently no known carrier of EVD in our state at the moment,” adding that health professionals were in agreement with government’s position. Raji said the government is committed to deploying all resources at its disposal to take into custody any person suspected to be infected with EVD, and isolate such a person for treatment. It warned the public to remain vigilant as the EVD still remains in other countries within the sub-region.

    The state recommended some measures to be taken in schools, such as training and sensitisation of pupils, vendors, teachers and non academic staff on EVD and how to avoid it; Identification of EVD focal persons in schools, who would be responsible for surveillance and health monitoring; provision of adequate environmental sanitation, including clean toilets and premises; provision of running water and soap and encouragement of frequent hand washing; sensitisation of pupils on other personal hygiene habits, like the use of handkerchiefs when sneezing or coughing; and arrangement for prompt referral of any sick person to the nearest health institution for treatment. The Nation found that the level of communication is high, especially between private school owners and parents on EVD and resumption.

    Aside the use of blood pressure monitors and wash hand basins placed outside school premises, many private schools have been communicating with parents through Short Message Service (SMS) intimating them of measures being taken to guarantee their children’s safety. A source at King of Kings private School in Okokomaiko, a Lagos suburb, who pleaded not to be mentioned, said the school management made it mandatory to brief parents through SMS every Monday and Saturday on steps being taken to reinforce their confidence. “All through the long vacation, there was hardly any week we did not send SMS to parents on what we were doing on Ebola. We kept telling them (parents) that we could not go against government’s directive as far as resumption was concerned. But we can take certain steps to reassure parents not to bother.

    Before the week runs out, we are also planning to meet the PTA to finalise outstanding issues against Monday,” the source said. This development, notwithstanding, did not douse parents’ apprehensions. Mr Abdulmalik Itsemiye, a father of two, whose children attend Dawah Nursery and Primary School, Jakande Estate Isolo, Lagos, agreed that children should return to school. According to him, the government should ensure that schools managements are educated on how to manage the situation while their pupils are in school. He said: “If the government says they should resume, they should because nobody has the assurance that Ebola will be eradicated even next month.

    We should just find ways to control it because sitting at home is not the best for the pupils, after all parents still take their children out to places and parties where they meet people and mix up with other children and adult.” Another parent, Mr Steven Chuks, said he would allow his children resume on one condition. “That the PTA should also make sure that they go round the schools before resumption proper to check if the steps taken by the school are right,” he said. He added: “It will not be easy for the PTA for sure, but they have to take it upon themselves to make sure the school is okay for resumption.” However, another parent, Boise Rita, whose children school at Laurel Nursery and Primary School, Jakande Estate Isolo, held a contrasting view.”I won’t allow my son resume anytime soon because he is still very little and cannot protect himself from others. He cannot distinguish between the sick and the healthy yet.

    Aside, I feel one should be careful with children especially, when two teachers have to watch over 15 pupils. Children tend to put their hands in their mouth every time without caution and I cannot also guarantee my child’s safety out there,” she said. She continued: “I believe many children have travelled for holidays to different parts of the country. How can one be sure that they didn’t get in contact with an Ebola patient during this time?” adding: “I don’t really know how schools can check or safeguard thousands of kids coming to school aside just washing their hands and probably talking to them. Continuous orientation about the disease and preventive measures will do. Above all, parents should keep talking to their children that are grown up while I suggest that those still very little should stay back at home for now.”

    Stating her view another parent, Mrs Lylian Nathaniel, whose four children attend Missam International Schools, Meiran, Lagos, shared with Rita’s view. “God forbid! What are they are going to read that I will allow them risk their lives when it is obvious that government is still working towards curbing the EVD. There has to be a certain measure put in place by the government because it’s like many schools are not fully ready to join in the fight against Ebola,” she said. She added: “What I mean by all this is that they do not have the wherewithal to help curb the spread of the virus and if it gets to the school, then our case would be worse than Liberia and Sierra Leone. I need to be very sure that this disease has been totally handled before I can hand my children out to any school. So for now, they are learning at home.” For another parent, Mrs Kareema Adefajo, October 13 date is it. Her mind, she said, has settled for the October 13 date. “No, I wouldn’t allow them resume. I will advise that schools resume on 13th October. Before then I am sure that with the Grace of God things would be different,” she said.

    A private school teacher, Mr. Babatunde Nurudeen, feels the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) has not been fair to their counterparts in private schools since the latter knows that their salaries would be paid. Said Nurudeen: “As the federal government now puts the resumption on 22nd September, teachers in public schools do not want the resumption until next year since they know that anytime school resumes the government will pay their salaries.” “In addition, our school is making some preparation for the prevention of Ebola. We have purchased the temperature scanning machine for screening visitors to the school.

    The school has also aquired a lot of sanitisers for washing hands as well as liquid soap. The school surroundings had been fumigated. The cleaners are also standby for frequent washing of the toilets. I personally believe that with all these in place, the school is seriously ready for resumption,” he added. Another parent, Mrs Adefolahan Oluwatoyin, is happy to see her kids return to the classroom. “I was so happy when it was announced that schools would resume on September 22,” Afolayan said, adding:  “This is because many of the pupils do not read at home at all. They spend most of their time watching films and chatting with friends. But with this resumption, they will focus more on their studies.”

    She, however, added her voice. “Concerning Ebola, the government should ensure that they provide every school with water and sanitiser. Government should also provide schools with the temperature scanning device in order to check teachers, parents and pupils’ temperature before entering the school premises. The government should appoint officials to go round schools and check if they all have the necessary facilities to curb Ebola’. For Mrs Akinbode Rachel, there was no point for children staying back at home as enough time had already been wasted. “The decision that schools should resume on 22 September is right. I say so because if allowed to stay longer, it will affect teaching and learning, as most children have spent the better part of their holidays playing around and watching films,” she said.  

  • Zamfara extends resumption to Oct 13

    The Zamfara State government has extended schools’ resumption date  from September 22 to October 13. The Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Education, Alhaji Lawal Talata Mafara, has said.

    The October date was initially fixed by the Federal Government when the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) broke out in the country, but brought it forward to September 22 after the government assessed the situation to be under control

    Addressing reporters in Gusau, Mafara said the extension was the result of a stakeholders’ meeting.

    He said the Ministry of Education considered the peculiarities of the state, “more especially the Sallah festival, which is just a week from the date’’.

    Mafara explained that many pupils in primary and post-primary schools might not resume as expected and stakeholders agreed to extend the date.

    The decision, he said, also affected students on exchange programmes in Zamfara.

  • Lagos okays September 22 for schools’ resumption

    Lagos okays September 22 for schools’ resumption

    The Lagos State government says all is set for schools’ resumption on September 22.

    The government, in a statement issued yesterday, explained its support for the date announced by the Federal Government.

    The statement reads: “Concerning the resumption of all public and private nursery, primary and secondary schools for the 2014/2015 session, Lagos State Government supports the September 22, 2014 date, which was announced by the Federal Government after a national consultation on efforts to contain the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in Nigeria.

    “Although this resumption date is advisory, as education is a concurrent matter to be regulated by the respective Federal and States Authorities, Lagos State Government considers it eminently justifiable, in view of the fact that there is currently no known carrier of EVD in our State at the moment. Furthermore, the last individual suspected to have been exposed to the virus will be discharged from observation on September 18, 2014, if he tests negative for the virus. All public and private educational institutions in the State are therefore directed to schedule their resumption accordingly.

    “Considering the current situation report, it is clear that the risk of infection with EVD in Lagos State has been significantly reduced. Health professionals working on the outbreak are also in agreement that there is no reason why schools should remain closed beyond the 22nd of September, 2014.

    “  In spite of the foregoing, the State Government has now developed and will deploy all resources necessary to sustain the capacity to promptly take into custody any person suspected to be infected with EVD, as well as safely test, monitor and isolate such a person for treatment as may be found necessary without endangering other members of the public.

    “We also acknowledge the need for everyone to remain very vigilant, as the disease still remains in other countries within the sub-region. The following steps will therefore be taken in all schools, whether public or private, before and after resumption of schools:

    *Training and sensitization of students, vendors, teachers and non academic staff on EVD and how to avoid it;

    * Identification of EVD Focal Persons in schools who would be responsible for surveillance and health monitoring;

    *Provision of adequate environmental sanitation, including clean toilets and premises;

    * Provision of running water and soap and encouragement of frequent hand washing;

    *Sensitisation of students on other personal hygiene habits, like the use of handkerchiefs when sneezing or coughing; and

    *Arrangement for prompt referral of any sick person to the nearest health institution for treatment.

    “In spite of the foregoing, the State Government reiterates that the health of all its residents is a matter of utmost importance and, if any reasons emerge for a reconsideration of the school resumption date, a well-considered decision will be taken and the general public will be informed accordingly.

    “The state government salutes the health personnel and health institutions that have done their best to ensure the containment of EVD. Government officials will meet presently with those health institutions, which might have suffered adverse economic consequences as a result, and will find ways of assisting them to mitigate their loses and safely reopen for business as soon as possible.”

  • Schools’ resumption tops agenda as Senators, Reps resume

    Schools’ resumption tops agenda as Senators, Reps resume

    The contention over resumption of primary and secondary schools from the long vacation next week because of the Ebola outbreak and the controversy over the Independent National Electoral Commission  (INEC)’s creation of 30,000 new polling units will top the agenda as the National Assembly returns after over two months recess.

    The two chambers are expected back in plenary tomorrow.

    Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs  Mohammed Zakari, confirmed tomorrow’s resumption. His deputy, Victor Ogene, said one of first assignments the House would be a briefing for the House Committee on Electoral Matters by INEC over the creation of 30,000 polling units. Leaders of the South have stated their opposition to the plan.

    According to Ogene,  who spoke from his Constituency in Anambra state, the House Committee on Electoral Matters would interface with aggrieved interest groups with the view to averting a crisis ahead of the general elections.

    “The Committee on Electoral Matters will also interface with various INEC and other stakeholders on electoral issues that came up including the by-elections held in some states.

    “It will create an opportunity for them to brief the House appropriately and for us to take informed decision on resumption.”

    He said in spite of the break, many of the House’s standing committees including Education and Health had interacted with stakeholders in order to resolve some national issues.

    According to him, the Committee on Education will meet with stakeholders including  Minister of Education, Ibrahim Shekarau, Minister of Health, Onyebuchi Chukwu,  and Minister of Labour and Productivity, Emeka Wogu today, to discuss the resumption of schools.

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) and the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) and Parents and Teachers Association (PTA) among others are also expected at the meeting.

    In this final lap of the Seventh Assembly, the lawmakers are expected to put finishing touches to pending bills like Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB); Cybercrime Bill; Tobacco Bill; anti-Terrorism Bill and Asset forfeiture Bill, Constitution review, among others.

  • Schools resumption

    Schools resumption

    •The Federal Government should have carried the doctors along

    In its wisdom or otherwise, the Federal Government, through its Ministry of Education, has fixed resumption date for schools in Nigeria for September 22. The initial postponement to October 13 by the government last month was to prevent the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) from spreading over the country, and especially in the schools where pupils are more prone to catching the disease because of their tender age.

    For the ministry, it appears that the problem of EVD in Nigeria was over, so that the coast was clear for our children to go back to school. Unfortunately, the Minister of Education could not speak for the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), those to face the fire in case of any emergency arising from Ebola.

    Expectedly, the NMA, on September 8 faulted the Federal Government’s directive to schools to resume on September 22. The new directive from the Federal Ministry of Education must have been as a result of its thinking that before that date, Ebola virus would have taken its flight from Nigeria. But this was not the case as the NMA, through its secretary, Dr. Olawunmi Alayaki, had this to say: “All schools ought to remain shut till all those under surveillance for the Ebola Virus Disease in the country had been certified free”. Also, said the NMA, “We are not happy with this decision on the resumption of schools. Schools should be shut till the last suspect is certified free of the virus”. The NMA, therefore, suggested that the resumption date should be shifted till December or early next year, or in the next three months, “to allow the government to have enough time to follow the standard procedure for containing the virus”.

    Any thought of reopening the schools when the disease is yet to be brought under reasonable control – there are still reported cases of the virus in Lagos and Port Harcourt and, maybe, some other undetected cases in the country – will amount to suicide by taking the avoidable risk of exposing the lives of innocent school children to unnecessary danger and untimely death. We also believe that the Federal Government should have waited till October when the situations in Rivers and Lagos states were expected to be conclusively managed – another safety measure the government should have waited for before the premature opening of schools– for it to act. Also, parents should not be in a hurry to get their children back to school by all means, especially as the case of one Ebola virus in a school can spread to other schools to the extent that cases of this virus could become so unmanageable for the government. Perhaps, each state government should decide its date of resumption based on its assessment of the situation on ground.

    Ebola is a serious matter, especially as there is no known cure for it yet. It would be an extreme folly if the government should dance to the tunes of proprietors of private schools to order the hasty resumption of schools. We do not have to wait until Ebola becomes much more serious than it is before taking knee-jerk responses to curb it. We would have thought the December period given by the NMA was rather too far but we believe the doctors are in a better position to know, in view of the “standard procedure for containing the virus” that they mentioned. At any rate, the advice for resumption date for the schools should not have been that of the education ministries alone, they ought to have carried the doctors along since they are the ones directly in the line of fire should there be problems.

    Because of Nigeria’s population, the consequence would be so severe that no one could predict its negative effects on the West African sub-region in particular, and the African continent in general should we make any mistake on Ebola, especially with our vulnerable ones. As we know, forewarned is forearmed.

  • Schools: Mixed reactions trail new resumption date

    Schools: Mixed reactions trail new resumption date

    Mixed reactions have continued to trail the directive by the Federal Government that both private and public schools should resume for the 2014/15 academic year on September 22 instead of the October 13 it  earlier announced.

    While some residents of Aba, the commercial capital of Abia State still express the fear that it was too sudden, others believe the government acted in the interest of Nigerians. They added that with the level of consciousness among Nigerians on the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD), the spread of the disease would not be affect their wards.

    Many parents said the Federal Government should have allowed the resumption date to remain October 13; as the government would have enough time to have accurate data from various states on the status of the outbreak.

    One of the parents, Mr. Augustine Chukwuemeka, said: “It was a hasty decision. I learnt that the World Health Organisation had appealed to wealthy countries to come to the aid of West African countries hit by Ebola, including Nigeria.

    “There is no known cure for the disease. The experimental vaccines are not yet here. Our borders are still very porous. People who may be in Patrick Sawyer’s situation can beat security checks to find their way into the country.

    “I heard that the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) and other affiliate unions had rejected the date. I am in total support of their positions. Even though the Federal Government may have acted in the interest of the country, the decision was a hasty one.”

    Chief Nkemjika Ibenji, one of the directors of Victory Early Learning Centre, Aba, praised the Federal Government’s decision, describing it as a step taken in the best interest of the country’s education system.

    Ibenji said: “Though the shift in the resumption date of schools has affected the academic programme as contained in the curriculum of the Ministry of Education, it was a wise decision by the Federal Government because it is something that pertains to life and health. The spread of Ebola is not something that you assume or say for sure that your next neighbour doesn’t have.”

    On how the lost grounds could be regained, he said: “Usually, there is what we call crash programme, which then means that the system will go into crash programme.

    “We are going to build works that were supposed to have been done in the previous weeks into the scheme of work for the rest of the session. This translates to the fact that teachers and students will be prepared to go the extra mile to teach and learn.”

    In their preparedness to manage the spread of the dreaded disease among pupils and students, he said: “Before the incident of the Ebola virus disease, we have the culture of constant hand washing in the school. We make sure that every child that goes out to ease him or herself washes his or her hands thoroughly with soap and water to avoid contamination.

    “With the outbreak of Ebola virus disease, every teacher will ensure that every child that steps out of the classroom will wash his hands with soap to avoid the spread of whatsoever disease that may come up.

    “I am of the opinion that nothing will happen to the children when the resume school. Parents should allow their children and wards come back to school as soon as schools resumes.

    “There is the need for proper orientation to enable people to understand the situation.

    “There is also the need for government to send monitoring teams to schools in the rural areas to educate the teachers and the students on preventive measures to be taken to prevent the spread of the virus. Though there has been wide publicity on the disease, there should be on-the-spot assessment on schools by ministries of health and education in order to ensure total compliance to the Federal Government’s directives.”