Tag: schools

  • Education materials rot away in Ogun schools

    Education materials rot away in Ogun schools

    Some education materials procured for secondary schools in Ogun State since 2012 are rotting away at the Abeokuta High School, Idi-Aba Library.

    The materials, which were said to have been procured by the Governor Ibikunle Amosun administration shortly after he was sworn in for his first term in office in 2010, could not go round all the secondary schools.  The distribution was suspended and the remaining materials were moved to Abeokuta High School, Idi Aba for safe-keeping. However, the materials have been abandoned in the past six years.

    Southwest Report gathered that while some schools were lucky to have received the items, including branded school bags, ball pens, education and instructional materials for science and technical colleges, branded exercise books and laboratory materials, others are yet to get theirs.

    The materials that were kept at the Frederick O. Oridota Library since 2012 have prevented the students to have access to the use of the library for many years and most of the books have been covered with dust; a sign of many years of abandonment.

    When Southwest Report visited the school premises, students who were supposed to be in the library in accordance with the school’s timetable were seen playing on the field. They were warned not to go near the school library.

    Investigation revealed that some of the items, especially the ball pens, had dried up.

    Speaking to Southwest Report on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the matter, a member of staff of the school explained that bureaucratic bottleneck by the Ministry of Education might have caused the continuous retention of the education materials in the school library.

    He said: “The excuse adduced by the government for keeping the materials was not tenable because if the materials could not go round, they should have been given to some of the schools instead of allowing it to get rotten here”

    He pointed out that since the materials have been kept in the school since 2012, the students did not have access to the library and all the school programmes concerning library education has been suspended.

    “This is very unfair; the government should have stored the materials at the Ministry of Education or in any government store instead of keeping them here for keeping sake,” our source said.

    A student of SS3 who simply identified himself as Oluwatosin explained that the materials have been kept in the school library for many years and the students can no longer use the facility again.

    “You can see that majority of the students are playing on the field while some are loitering about. If the library is not forbidden for the students, some of us would have loved to be there to read our books.

    “I was in JSS 1 when they brought those materials to our school and we were warned not to go near the library again because government properties are kept there. It was later that we learnt that education materials meant for some selected schools were kept in the library.” he said.

    Another student, Sola Aderibigbe (JSS3) said he met the library of the school sealed up with a warning that no student was allowed to loiter around the place, let alone entering inside.

    “I later learnt that government properties were kept there” he said.

    Speaking to Southwest Report on phone, the Principal of the school, Mr. Olusegun Obadimu explained that the alumnae of the school recently met and the issue was discussed at length, adding that they promised to intervene; indicating that the materials would be removed from the library soon.

    While speaking on the issue, the Commissioner of Education, Mrs. Modupe Mujota said the educational materials were not deliberately abandoned. She said the materials could not go round all the schools as the reason for the materials being stored at Abeokuta Grammar School, Idi Aba.

    Mujota, who spoke to Southwest Report on phone, explained that as soon as some issues are resolved in the ministry, the materials would be removed from the school.

    “The materials will be removed soonest, that is what l can say about the issue,” she said.

    However, a top government official in the Ministry of Education who spoke to our correspondent in confidence argued that the materials were rotting away because of the bureaucratic bottleneck from the ministry.

    “It is sad that the governor himself will not be happy that the materials that were bought with the taxpayer’s money are now rotting away somewhere on the flimsy excuse that it cannot go round. Is it not better to give the materials out to any of the available schools instead of allowing it to rot away like that?” he said.

     

  • Experts to low-cost schools: shape up

    Experts to low-cost schools: shape up

    Unregistered low-cost private schools in Lagos State may not be under threat of being shut by the government.  But, experts  have warned that competition and 21st century demands for technology may drive them out of business, KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE reports.

    Many low-cost private schools under the aegis of the Association for Formidable Educational Development (AFED) in Lagos have survived repeated campaigns by the government to shut them down.  Because many run foul of the registration criteria that require that they be situated on four plots of land owned by the school; that the school buildings must meet certain standards; proprietors and teachers must be educators, among others, most of them are unapproved by the government.

    However, with research by Developing Effective Private Education in Nigeria (DEEPEN) showing that more than 8,000 of such schools serve low-income earners and communities all over the state, the government appreciates their role in helping to educate about 60 per cent of school-age children who would have otherwise been out of school.

    AFED President, Mrs Ifejola Esther Dada, said at the group’s Congress last week that its members had been able to prove that in addition to ensuring that less-privileged children are not denied education, they also contribute positively to the economy through employment.

    “Many often refer to us as mushroom schools and we have faced several onslaughts from different angles threatening the existence of our schools without recourse to our value and importance in the scheme of educating our teeming children, especially those that fell in the categories of poor communities and low-income earners.

    ‘’Today, there are fact sheets about our operations, our values, our strength, our contributions to the economy of the state and country coupled with the figure of how much we are saving the government yearly,” said Mrs Dada, who was represented by the group’s Secretary, Mr Orji Kanu, at the event.

    As a result, the government has made requirements for getting approval for schools more flexible and introduced a grading system to allow them move from one level of accreditation to the other. Also, the hard-stance inspection of the past has evolved to an evaluation seeking to support schools to improve on their service delivery in a friendly manner.

    Office of Education Quality Assurance Director-General, Mrs Ronke Soyombo, said the education ministry was encouraging schools under AFED to upgrade their facilities.

    “The administration is not interested in closing schools, if their activities are not criminal because we realised that you are really supporting the state government in providing education. But in doing this, we want you to do the right thing. Inspection is no longer about finding fault. We are about helping you to improve.  AFED must ensure all unapproved schools are encouraged to seek approval,” she said.

    However, some experts have warned that the relaxed position of the government towards registration should not be reason for proprietors running these low cost schools to think that all is well with their businesses.

    DEEPEN Team Leader, Dr Gboyega Ilusanya, said AFED schools must begin to respond to the challenges of the recession by seeking ways to make their schools offer quality education at an affordable price.

    He said though AFED schools are many and have increased over the years, research has shown that the school sizes have grown smaller. He said this called for a paradigm shift in the way schools were run and advised the proprietors to consider collaborating in such ways that they would benefit from scale.

    He said: “Our research shows that school size is reducing. We have many small schools serving smaller populations.  We have many schools with only 50-something pupils. Schools need to find a way to benefit from scale – offering affordable low-cost education at scale.  They could think of operating as a chain of schools.”

    Ilusanya also said AFED schools need to take quality and technology seriously. He said failure to do so would result in the risk of closure.

    “Quality is something that has to be improved upon. You cannot rely on old methods used to bring us up and achieve excellence in the past to achieve excellence in the 21st century. Technology plays a role in improving learning and you cannot afford to be left behind. If you refuse to improve, your service will expire and it will not be needed. If regulation does not drive you out of business, you may find that it is competition that will drive you out,” he said.

    Ilusanya said DEEPEN, which is a DFID-funded initiative to boost low cost private education in Nigeria, was working out ways to help such schools access services that would have been the preserve of big schools at affordable cost.

    “What DEEPEN is trying to do is to incentivise service providers, who deliver services to the higher end of the market to look at the lower end and benefit from the numbers.  And we have such firms coming on board offering technological services. Already, over 300 AFED schools have signed up,” he said.

    On her part, Mrs Folasade Adefisayo, CEO, Leading Learning Ltd, lamented that many AFED members were not making use of technology to improve their schools.  She said research showed that learning outcomes of pupils attending Nigerian schools were too low.

    Though faulting the curriculum for focusing only on knowledge rather than imbuing pupils with skills, Mrs Adefisayo said there were ways schools could enrich their curriculum offerings such that their pupils could be at par with those trained in the best schools worldwide.

    She said training for such skills were available on the Internet but lamented that many of the school owners did not know about them.

    “British Council is offering free training to schools to teach the six core skills to their pupils – problem solving, critical thinking, creativity and innovation, student leadership, etc.  These are not subjects; they are embedded into the way you run the school. I am one of the facilitators and the programme has been on for two years now but no AFED school is among those being trained.  All the information is on the internet but none of you know about it and it is absolutely free,” she said.

    Mrs Adefisayo, who is also the School Administrator of Osogbo High School, Osogbo, urged the schools to improve on their teaching and learning if they wanted to remain in business.

    “You must improve the quality of teaching and learning. My job as a consultant is to watch teaching and learning in classrooms. I am troubled by what I see.  I observed a JSS1 class from the first to the last period.  The classes were so boring.

    “To improve teaching and learning, it means professionalising the teachers and providing them with resources to help them.  Train your teachers.  Infrastructure is important, but the most important factor that determines quality in any school is the quality of teaching and learning.  You are not paying attention to quality enough.You are as good as your weakest link. If you must make it your mantra that AFED schools are as good as the worst school, your schools will improve,” she said.

    Mrs Adefisayo, a former executive director of Corona Schools Trust Council, said there were ways AFED schools could provide quality education at reduced costs.

    “There are things a school can do to improve teaching and learning, which may not be as expensive as you think. For example, if a school determines to train its teachers, it can train do so in-house. There are organisations that support free training, such as British Council.  Some people provide free textbooks and teaching in schools; you can train teachers to make classroom resources. Rather than just saying let’s buy charts, you can make your own charts and manipulables in the classroom and use a lot of things around them in the classroom to teach many things. You do not necessarily need to buy what big schools will buy; use whatever you have optimally to provide good enough education,” she said.

    A former director in the Lagos State Ministry of Education, Mr Ibukun Daramola, also complained about the pedagogy used by many schools, urging AFED to address it if it seeks to contribute to the 2030 Education for All goal among the Sustainable Development Goals.

    “There is lopsidedness in education. We are so focused on paper tests but nobody is talking about internalising the concept. When you teach a child, the idea is that he internalises the concept and reproduces it in another way,” he said.

    Difavis Children’s School Proprietor, Alagbado, Mrs Agnes Edeko, said with changes in the education landscape, she would review her business model.

    “This is an eye opener. It makes me to understand that I cannot keep doing things the same way.  I have not been using technology seriously but will now do so,” she added.

  • Oyo govt urges schools food vendors to resume work

    The Oyo State government has appealed to striking food vendors engaged for Federal Government’s primary school feeding programme in the state to resume work.

    It said government will clear all the outstanding arrears this week.

    There are about 1,000 food vendors across the state cooking for primary schools.

    They have withdrawn their services as the Federal Government failed to pay over three weeks’ arrears owed them.

    Commissioner for Education, Prof Joseph Adeniyi Olowofela, who spoke with The Nation yesterday on the development.

    The commissioner assured the food vendors of government’s commitment to the programme.

    He blamed the non-payment on logistics problem.

    Olowofela said: “I can assure you that their accounts will be credited before tomorrow. The state government, immediately the matter was brought to its notice, held a meeting with the food vendors after consulting Federal Government’s officials in charge of the programme and we have gotten the assurance that their accounts will be credited anytime from now.”

    The food vendors in the 33 local government areas have stopped giving meals to primary school pupils in the past four weeks.

    They said they have been using their personal funds to provide meals for the pupils.

    In a show of appreciation, scores of the food vendors yesterday converged on the governor’s office, Secretariat Complex, Ibadan, to thank the state governor Abiola Ajimobi for his quick intervention in the matter.

    One of the food vendors from Oyo town, who spoke in confidence, said: “We have been using our money to feed the children in the past four weeks without pay. Now that we don’t have any money to continue feeding the pupils, we have to stop cooking because there is no money to buy food items anymore.”

  • Schools come alive in Ondo community

    Schools come alive in Ondo community

    Bothered about the deplorable state of some public schools in Ondo State, the Senator representing Ondo Central District, Chief Tayo Alasoadura has inaugurated blocks of renovated classrooms at St Patrick’s Primary School and Baptist High School, both in Idanre Local Government Area of Ondo State as part of his constituency projects.

    Besides, the lawmaker has launched the construction of multi-purpose hall in the town.

    Idanre is one of the six local government areas in the Central District. Others are Akure South, Ifedore, Akure North, Ondo East and Ondo West.

    Alasoadura apologised for his inability to organise the quarterly Town Hall meeting he promised since his assumption of office.

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Upstream) said the enormity of work in the Senate and particularly the Committee where he is the Chairman and his resolve to break the jinx of numerous years over the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) were largely responsible.

    He, however, expressed delight that the jinx was finally broken when the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB) was passed on the floor of the Senate.

    This development, he said, generated accolades of fulfilment despite what it cost his constituent, promising that the Town Hall meeting would commence without delay.

    Alasoadura noted that despite the overwhelming legislative/committee activities he is saddled with, he had been able to facilitate some projects for the Senatorial District while also executing some personally in fulfilment of his campaign promises.

    The former commissioner noted that having observed that most of the facilities in the primary and secondary schools were in deplorable condition, he decided to renovate them within the available resources.

    He recalled that on December 22, last year, he organised a women/youth empowerment programme in Akure South for three out of the six local government areas within the Senatorial District where he distributed empowerment materials that included cars, motorcycles, manual sewing machines and grinding machine.

    He also added that cash empowerment was given to over 60 beneficiaries across the three local government areas, noting that the empowerment programme for the three other local government areas will hold later this year.

    Residents and management of the schools praised the efforts of Senator Alasoadura in enhancing the living conditions of members of Idanre community.

    Dignitaries who attended the event were the lawmaker representing Akure North/South Federal Constituency at the National Assembly, Afe Olowookere, Caretaker Chairman, Akure North Local Government Area, Segun Oluyede and traditional rulers, among others.

  • NBC rewards schools’debate winners

    The nigerian Bottling Company (NBC), has rewarded winners of the Lagos State Schools’ Debate competition.

    First winner, United Senior High School, Ikorodu received N250,000. Vetland Senior Grammar School, Agege, which emerged second, got N150,000, while Epe Senior Grammar School, which came third, went home with N100,000.

    The grand finale, which held  in Alausa was a partnership between the NBC and the Lagos State government.

    The contest, which had 631 public schools in attendance  – 165 primary schools, 224 junior secondary schools and 243 senior secondary schools  – across the six Education Districts in the state, also featured 34 private schools (10 primary, 12 JSS and 12 SSS).

    NBC’s Legal, Public Affairs and Communication Director, Mrs. Sade Morgan, said the contest was one platform for the beverage firm to showcase its corporate social responsibility.

    “We have decided to sponsor this laudable competition because we believe that corporate organisations should focus on listening to, celebrating and rewarding future leaders. This is why we are always found setting the pace,” Morgan said.

    Morgan noted that the NBC makes significant investment in education through provision and upgrade of education infrastructure nationwide, in addition to capacity building across all levels of education as well as other support initiatives.

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, who spoke through his Special Adviser on Communities and Communication, Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan, said the contest formed part of activities to commemorate the state’s Golden Jubilee celebration.

    He said: “It is said children are the leading message we send at a time we will not see. This, therefore, is one of the many avenues we have provided for you to display your mental abilities not just as children, but also as tomorrow’s leaders. I urge you not to relent in reading books and articles that will help to widen your horizon and help improve your communication skills.’’

    “I am impressed by the performances that have been displayed from the preliminaries to this final stage. It is another statement to our effort aimed at improving the standards of our public education system. In this competition there are no losers. Given the standards that have been displayed, I consider you all as winners, congratulations!’’

    He added: “On our part as a government of the people, we will continue to provide conducive environment and other facilities that will enhance teaching and learning. We will give you the support needed in terms of proving qualitative education so that our children can achieve your dreams of becoming whatever you want to become in life.  I want to appreciate all the teachers that are committed to ensuring that our vision for the education sector is realised. Your dedication and hard work will not go unrewarded,” he added.

  • Ekiti ready to return mission schools, says Fayose

    Ekiti ready to return mission schools, says Fayose

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has said his administration is ready to hand over mission schools to their original owners as long as they can prove that they have the capacity to provide qualitative education in such institutions.

    The governor spoke at the weekend in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, during a meeting with the leadership of the Anglican Church and members of the Alumni Association of Christ’s School in Ado-Ekiti on moves to return the school and Christ’s Girls School to their original owners.

    Fayose said the provision of quality education to Ekiti children and improving standards the state had set were important to his administration.

  • Teachers adamant as Kogi schools re-open

    Teachers adamant as Kogi schools re-open

    There seems to be no end in sight to the rift between Kogi State government and workers in its tertiary institutions. Teachers at the Kogi State University and Kogi State Polytechnic have rebuffed the directive to return to work. But, non-academic counterparts have since complied. MOHAMMED YABAGI reports.

    IN  defiance of the government’s directive, sfaff of the Kogi State University (KSU) and Kogi State Polytechnic (KOGI POLY) have refused to return to work since their school resumed on June 5. But their non-academic counterparts have since returned to work.

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) said its members would return to work when the government meets its demands.

    The schools reopened after more than five months strike by state-owned tertiary institutions over non-payment of salary arrears. Six of the eight affected schools re-opened last month, but KSU and KOGI POLY remained closed until last week.

    The resumption was not without drama. The academic staff described the government’s directive as a “blackmail and intimidation”, vowing not to succumb to government’s threat.

    When government fixed the resumption date, the Joint Action Committee (JAC), comprising the workers’ unions, held an emergency meeting, after which it issued a communiqué on June 1.

    In the communiqué, signed by its leader, Comrade Sunday Boluromi, JAC said it was disappointed with the government’s directive on the re-opening of the schools while talks on workers’ demands were going on. The committee said there was no reason for the workers to resume when their living conditions had deteriorated. It said many of the workers were traumatised by the prolonged staff screening which led to the withholding of salaries for  months.

    The communiqué reads: “JAC empathises with students, who have been at home for a long period. They should be reminded that JAC’s struggle is to save the soul of our education in the state. And we hope that, at the end of this painful strike, tertiary institutions owned by Kogi State would be better positioned to turn out qualified graduates.

    “There are evil machinations from some quarters to incite students against our members on resumption. Let it be clear to those behind this plot that, whatever goes around comes around. JAC is disappointed with government for its decision to prematurely retire some of our members. This is an outright violation of the extant Law of 65-year retirement age for staff of tertiary institutions.

    “Consequent upon the heartfelt intervention of our Governing Councils, JAC graciously constricted its 31-point request to five irreducible demands. This action is geared towards suspension of the ongoing strike. The demands are that the Visitor to our schools (Governor) should approve and implement the screening reports of the respective schools’ Governor Councils, because we have confidence in the members Governing Councils. Therefore, only their screening list is acceptable to JAC and any other list from anywhere shall be rejected.

    “We want salaries of all members, whether they are cleared or not, to be paid without further delay. The government must step up actions to provide the needs of each tertiary institution as submitted by their Governing Councils. Government must also honour the joint resolution reached by its representatives and JAC on March 24, 2017, which include reversal of the new tax rates and refund of January 2017 excess tax to tertiary institutions.

    “Our last demand is that, government must give definite date for the refund of excess tax collected from staff of Kogi State University and Kogi State College of Education. These are the conditions for peace and resolution of the crisis.”

    JAC made a case for disengaged workers, saying it was wrong to sack them despite the “convincing reasons” by heads of institutions for their retention. The committee described the pardon lists released by the government on May 31 and June 1, as a setback to any ongoing dialogue.

    JAC added: “Our members who had been cleared from the outset of the protracted staff screening exercise are now being victimised with threat of sack. This unwholesome act is another move by the cars in this government to destroy the gains made from the screening exercise.”

    The workers resolved that they could not be coerced to resume on June 5. They advised the government not to resort to threat and intimidation in resolving the impasse.

    The KSU chapter of ASUU, in a statement  titled: Between facts and fictions, said it would resist the government’s intimidation to coerce workers into resumption.

    Its chairman, Dr Gbenga Aina, said government did not show concern towards ending the strike, adding that there was no assurance of payment of workers’ salaries.

    He condemned the government’s claim that 95 per cent of salaries owed the academic staff of KSU had been paid, describing the claim as “fallacious and utterly misleading”.

    Aina said: “From available records, 275 workers, which represent 53.19 per cent of the 517 academic staff, are still being owed salary arrears ranging from three to 12 months. This figure is made up of tenure, sabbatical, contract staff studying overseas and 2015 employees.”

    He said only 46.81 per cent of academic employees had received salaries up to March 2017. He said the promise by the government to pay N50 million monthly to offset Earned Academic Allowances (EAA) owed was reneged on last December. This, according, negated the government’s assurance that it would increase the monthly installment of the EAA to N100 million with effect from January. He added that the outstanding payment was not captured in the state’s budget this year, wondering how the government wanted to pay the money.

    The ASUU chief said: “The ASUU, as a stakeholder in  university system, is desirous to see speedy resolution of the ongoing impasse. We, therefore, call on the KSU Governing Council and the Kogi State government to ensure the payment of all arrears of salaries and their components owed all our members before the strike can be called off.”

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited KSU on Monday, lecturers’ offices were locked. Students, who besieged lecture rooms, returned to their hostels in disappointment.

    The Students’ Union Government (SUG) leadership convened a congress, where they called on their lecturers and government to resolve their differences in the students’ interest.

  • NBC rewards schools’ debate winners

    The nigerian Bottling Company (NBC), has rewarded winners of the Lagos State Schools’ Debate competition.

    United Senior High School, Ikorodu, topped all the contenders with N250,000 cash reward. Vetland Senior Grammar School, Agege emerged second, winning N150,000, while Epe Senior Grammar School, which came third, went home with N100,000.

    The grand finale, which held at the Adeyemi Bero Auditorium, Alausa, was a partnership between the NBC and the Lagos State government.

    The contest, which had 631 public schools in attendance (165 primary schools, 224 junior secondary schools and 243 senior secondary schools) across the six Education Districts in the state, also featured 34 private schools (10 primary, 12 JSS and 12 SSS).

    NBC’s Legal, Public Affairs and Communications Director, Mrs. Sade Morgan, said the competition was one platform for the beverage firm to showcase its corporate social responsibility.

    “We have decided to sponsor this laudable competition because we believe that corporate organisations should focus on listening to, celebrating and rewarding future leaders. This is why we are always found setting the pace,” Morgan stated.

    Morgan noted that the NBC makes significant investment in education through provision and upgrade of education infrastructure nationwide, in addition to capacity building across all levels of education as well as other support initiatives.

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, who spoke through his Special Adviser on Communities and Communication Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan, said the competition formed part of activities to commemorate the state’s Golden Jubilee celebration.

    He said: “It is said that children are the leading message we send at a time we will not see. This, therefore, is one of the many avenues we have provided for you to display your mental abilities not just as children, but also as tomorrow’s leaders. I urge you not to relent in reading books and articles that will help to widen your horizon and help improve your communication skills.

    “I am impressed by the performances that have been displayed from the preliminaries to this final stage. It is another statement to our effort aimed at improving the standards of our public education system. In this competition there are no losers. Given the standards that have been displayed, I consider you all as winners, congratulations!

    “On our part as a government of the people, we will continue to provide conducive environment and other facilities that will enhance teaching and learning. We will give you the support needed in terms of proving qualitative education so that our children can achieve your dreams of becoming whatever you want to become in life.  I want to appreciate all the teachers that are committed to ensuring that our vision for the education sector is realised. Your dedication and hard work will not go unrewarded,” he added.

  • Schools or snares?

    SIR: In   a country where the supremely well-to-do and the average wealthy shove their kids out to foreign shores to   study, while vast swathes of children here are essentially fed the crumbs of ignorance, a new terrifying trend is emerging to add to the already nightmarish catalogue of horrors.

    A string of kidnappings has hit secondary schools around the country¯notably in Lagos. In the unraveling nightmare, armed bandits break into schools at night and pick away innocent students to be held as hostages until ransoms are paid. What will happen in the unlikely event that terrified parents fail to raise the money demanded is anyone‘s painful guess. This prevalent state of affairs while it mirrors the surging insecurity sweeping through the country is particularly portentous for the future of a country already making a beeline for the precipice.

    Now that they have become targets of predatory hawkers of death and insecurity, we must rise at once to defend our human heritage who would usher in posterity and serve as the bastions and custodians of the fact that we ever lived through these times. As much as the signs are not exactly apocalyptic just yet, an alarmed nation must arise to confront this new challenge that threatens our children in all their innocence. They already confront challenges that children should not ordinarily face anywhere in the world. Living as it is in Nigeria is an uphill task especially for children. They bear the brunt of the harsh economic realities swirling in the country and the storms of insecurity which rise time and time again in places across the country. It is an already difficult situation as it is.

    The repugnant reluctance of some state legislatures to give domestic effect to the Child Rights Act of 2003 also leaves a particularly sour taste in the mouth. This is   because their impaired rationalization seems to show that they do not really think that the interests of children should occupy prime place in discourses and policy making. This reluctance definitely has religious and cultural undertones. But it seems to betray most spectacularly the lack of political will that has had such a crippling effect on governance since the country transited to democracy in 1999.

    Nigeria must realize that no country which seriously seeks to leave a legacy and   have   a future as well as ascend to relevance in the comity of nations can afford to play footsie with its children. Children should never be allowed to age before they get to that stage. They should be protected at all costs from all religious, cultural, political, psychological and political upheavals. The government of the day at all levels can greatly help with this singular and historic task.

     

    • Kenechukwu Obiezu Esq,

    Abuja.

  • 700 schools shut for non-payment of fees

    700 schools shut for non-payment of fees

    Osun State Internal Revenue Service (OIRS) has sealed off over 700 private nursery, primary and secondary schools for non-payment of registration fees and taxes.

    Acting Chairman Bicci Alli said at a news briefing in Osogbo that the institutions disregarded paying or renewing registration fees.

    Alli, who said the schools operated for years without licences, added that the government was left with no option but to shut them.

    He said the exercise was to recoup taxes.

    The acting chairman urged proprietors to pay levies and taxes to support government’s effort to improve education standard.