Reps block plan to
close 556 private schools in Abuja
The House of Representatives on
Tuesday urged Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Muhammad Bello,
to stop further action on plan to close 556 private schools allegedly operating
illegally in the city.
This followed the unanimous adoption
of a motion presented under Matters of Urgent Public Importance by Rep. Albert
Adeogun (PDP-Osun).
Adeogun said closure of the schools
would make about 100,000 pupils to be out of schools.
According to him, the Department of
Quality Assurance of the Education Secretariat of the FCT Administration has
approved the close down of the schools as soon as funds are available to
execute the plan.
“This will impact negatively on the
future of the children and destroy the need to improve the literacy rate of
Nigerians’’, Adeogun said.
The lawmaker further expressed
concern that the move to close the schools without placing the students in
other schools would expose them to crime.
“The closure of the schools without
placing the children in other schools that can absorb the large population will
expose the children to crime and abuse.
“That may be the consequence of this
policy. The children may become victims of unwanted and unfortunate
circumstances by virtue of the closure of the schools.
“They may never have the opportunity
of furthering education which will not augur well for the country’’, Adeogun
said.
He argued that public schools in the
FCT were not sufficient to cater for the educational needs of the increasing
population.
“This is why many private nursery and
primary schools have emerged in the city’’, he added.
The House subsequently mandated the
Committee on FCT to investigate the plan to close down the schools and report
back in four weeks. (NAN)
Culled from Daily Post………………………..
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