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Ezekwesili: I don’t think Buhari’s administration is interested in education of children

Obiageli Katryn Ezekwesili, Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow, Robert Bosch Academy, Germany speaking during Press Conference: Tackling Xenophobia the session at the World Forum World Economic Forum on Africa 2019. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Jakob Polacsek

Obiageli Ezekwesili, former minister of education, says with the trend of attacks on schools, she does not think that the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari is interested in the education of children.

Aside from the abduction of close to 300 girls from Government Girls’ Secondary School, Chibok, Borno state, in April 2014, there have been attacks on schools in the north in recent times, leading to mass abduction of children.

Speaking on Friday when she featured on Politics Today, a Channels Television programme, she said the Safe School Initiative (SSI) which was launched in 2014 after the Chibok abduction failed, because the federal government did not give priority to the programme.

SSI was launched in May 2014 with the aim of creating a safe learning environment for children and schools affected by the Boko Haram insurgency, especially in the north-east.

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“It has failed because this government did not give priority to it. I do not think this government is interested in schoolchildren and their education. I do not think so,” she said.

“Look at northern Nigeria. Northern Nigeria is already behind the curve in terms of development. And development is a function of human capital — education, health, and all other associated services that people need in order to productively engage.”

Ezekwesili noted that the attitude towards the SSI has served as an incentive for criminals, who now attack schools.

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“So, it is clear that this attitude towards the safe school initiative that has made it not a priority, has ended up basically incentivising the business of the terrorists. The children need to be given priority in our country. We all need to insist that children should be priority, especially their education,” she said.

Asked about the whereabouts of the remaining abducted Chibok girls after seven years in captivity, she said the last information she heard about them was painful, adding that the majority of the girls may no longer be in captivity.

More than 100 Chibok girls are still missing, seven years after the abduction.

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