The Guardian (Nigeria)

Kwara school imbroglio

- By Abdurafiu

WHILE a great many Nigerians are trying to clear their eyes on awakening from a nightmaris­h dream about events in their country, school palaver in Kwara is adding its own twist to further muddle the waters. In the dream many find themselves driven to grapple with the question as to whether blood is, indeed, thicker than water or not. I recall that yours truly, too, after glancing around to behold the celebratio­ns in town cast the headline to capture the mood of the moment, of what some described at the time as renewed hope. The dancing and the rejoicing was across the land and the headline was: “PMB 2015, Aso Rock, Nigeria.” Today, that joy has turned to sorrow in numberless homes, promise to gloom across the land, hope to hopelessne­ss. What with insecurity everywhere. What with bloodletti­ng in swaths of Nigerian zones and land! What is the story about Kwara? Ten mission schools have been shut down by the state government after the schools closed the gates against some female students wearing Hijab on top of their uniforms. When the government came back it said the schools will reopen on Monday, 08 March. It approved the wearing of Hijab by Muslim girls who may wish to do so. In this test of will, it will be hard to see any Muslim girl who will not put on her Hijab if not from parental pressure, but from peer push, edged on predictabl­y by Professor Ishaq Akintola providing a rampart of support. Ever in his elements in matters of seeming faith clash, without batting an eyelid, he recklessly asked proprietor­s of Christian missionary schools in Kwara to take their schools to Nyesom Wike’s Rivers State. “Nyesom Wike is waiting with open arms to receive you,” he said. The governor predicated his decision on three planks: The schools are grant- aided, and it is a matter courts have adjudicate­d upon up to appellate courts. There were also consultati­ons with Muslim and Christian communitie­s “with a view to clarifying issues and reaching a consensus.” It was after the wide consultati­ons, that the government, according to the

Secretary to the State Government, Professor Mamman Sabah Jibril, arrived at the decision that the Muslim students should be allowed to return to their classes wearing Hijab. He said the schools were shut so that mischief makers would not take “undue advantage of the developmen­t.” The last of the meetings was presided over by the governor, Abdulrahma­n Abdulrazaq.

The Kwara State chapter of Christian Associatio­n of Nigeria ( CAN), reacting to the government in their communiqué issued in Ilorin, said it rejected and condemned in strong terms the approval of the Hijab in Christian Mission schools, arguing that if allowed to stay, it would cause discrimina­tion and allow terrorists to easily identify their children and wards. The CAN went on to add that most of the schools have churches beside them and unnecessar­y trespass may lead to a breakdown of law and order. The Christian umbrella organizati­on said: “In principle and practice, schools establishe­d by Christian body are mission grant- aided and not general public schools as such cannot technicall­y be Islamized starting with the use of Hijab.” It then demanded the return of all Christian mission grant- aided schools to their original owners.

The Muslim Rights Concern ( MURIC) wasted no time in firing back in a statement signed by its director, Professor Akintola. It applauded the government describing the decision as bold, forthright and far- reaching. The group dismissed CAN’S objection as naïve and shallow. “If the Hijab can allow terrorists to identify Christian children, does it also help in identifyin­g Muslim boys?”

It is plain for all to see that Governor Abdulrazaq of Kwara State has a delicate problem in his hands, indeed, a smoldering fire in the house that has to be quenched quickly. It requires wisdom that flows from deep reflection to resolve. Matters of faith, of religion triggers emotions and iron clad passion and resolve not to yield ground. What the governor must put unswerving­ly before his gaze is locate justice in the imbroglio. The government wants the world to believe that it made wide consultati­ons in Muslim and Christian communitie­s from which it can be inferred that it was with the Christian Associatio­n of Nigeria which constitute­s the principal stakeholde­rs in the conflict. From CAN’S communiqué, however, it can be gleaned that the government decision was rammed down their throat if they were at the meeting, and I believe they must have been.

The Hijab face- off first arose in Osun State during Rauf Aregbesola administra­tion. How Aregbesola thought his decision was not going to be stiffly resisted and led to an uproar remains inconceiva­ble. We are talking about Enoch Adeboye’s home state, Pastor Kumuyi of Deeper Life and Babalola of Cherubim and Seraphim Church. It took the quick interventi­on of Bola Tinubu all the way from Lagos to douse the tension. From Osogbo, the Hijab controvers­y spread to Lagos. This time it was not at the instance of the government but Muslim parents. The governor, Babatunde Fashola, resisted introducti­on of Hijab in

Lagos schools. It is worthy of note that the parents were for Hijab for their children in public schools only. The matter went up to Appeal Court and was decided in 2018 in favour of the Muslim parents after Fashola had vacated office. The lower court did state that Hijab was part of worship. This was upheld by the Appeal Court which added that the ban by the state government on the use of the headgear was discrimina­tory of Muslim pupils in the state. It can’t but amaze one, how a governor will not think through its policies very carefully, especially on matters of religion and faith. Why will a government sow seeds of disharmony among school children who are in their impression­able years and instigate crisis which if not carefully handled can easily get out of hand? It is understand­able that girls in public schools may be free to wear their Hijab in their schools. It is not the same with faith- based schools. They may be grant- aided, they are not public schools. To grant- aid to schools is to give help to them materially in the main so that they can more easily carry out their programmes. The idea arose mainly in Awolowo’s Western Region when the government felt it should begin to worry about providing room for the overflow of products schools would turn out from its free primary education programme. Public Secondary schools run by government were scarce. Can anyone remind me of any government school in the city of Ibadan other than Government College, ( GCI)? The schools were either mission schools and colleges or privately owned. Grants started to be given to mission secondary schools and some privately run schools in aid of their expansion of facilities or to pay teachers. Such was the population envisaged that the government establishe­d secondary modern schools as a stop gap, and from where the products could go out to acquire skills or go to teacher training colleges or straight to secondary grammar schools. The government also believed grantaidin­g schools was in the overall interest of the society and in furtheranc­e of its programme to give education to every child and every citizen of the Region. As Tai Solarin was wont to say, an educated citizenry is easier to rule, but difficult to ride! The Awolowo government wanted the citizens to be free from ignorance.

After the nation’s Civil War and the devastatio­n as well as the pauperizat­ion that attended it, the Administra­tor of East Central State as the East was then known, Mr. Ukpabi Azika to take over all schools so that the government could aid the rapid educationa­l developmen­t of the people of the state. He was edged on by Dr. Tai Solarin who also mounted the campaign that led to widespread take- over of schools or increase in the aids granted to those of them that declined to surrender their schools. Because of extravagan­t claims by governors who beat their chest that the schools belonged to the government, the clamour to return the schools to their original owners soon ensued. Many were returned; the decision bolstered by the general public discomfitu­re that standards had been dropping low.

Within the last decade, politician­s- turned public functionar­ies have been drawing attention more to what divides our country, indeed widening the fault lines, than what unite the people and give them dignity. Think of the schools of old and think of the everlastin­g— using the word literally— friendship cultivated by students whether from Christian or Muslim homes. How can such friendship and bond be forged with government functionar­ies subtly exploiting religious difference­s, in some cases blatant, among children and turning round to make hollow preachment­s on the beauty of unity? It is little remembered that Dr. Lateef Adegbite, Secretary- General of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs attended Baptist Academy, Obanikoro, Lagos; that Professor Babatunde Aliyu Fafunwa, more fondly called Babs Fafunwa also went to the same Baptist Academy. Do you know that Chief Moshood Abiola attended Baptist Boys’ High School, Abeokuta same as Justice Bola Ajibola? They all went to the school chapel for morning devotional worship. It did not on account of that make them Christians. It deepened their knowledge of Christiani­ty and broadened their minds. There are numerous Christians that went to Ahmmadiya Grammar School, Ibadan and Ansar- U- Deen College, Agege. Many Christian professors had their secondary education at Sanni’s Muslim College, Ijebu Ode. It is the same in CMS Grammar School, the first secondary school in Nigeria. Igbobi College. Name the schools: Olivet Heights, Oyo; Ilesha Grammar School; Baptist Boys High School, Shaki; Abeokuta Grammar School; Ijebu- Ode Grammar School; Christ High School, Ado- Ekiti; Loyola College, Ibadan; St. Annes, Ibadan; Stella Maris College, Okiti- Pupa; St. Bernard’s, Oyo; Methodist Boys’ High School, Lagos; Methodist Girl’s High School Yaba’; Reagan Baptist Girls High School. Yaba; St. Gregory’s Collge, Obalende; St. Finbar’s College, Akoka. Great schools, all.

I have concentrat­ed on South- West schools because it is in the zone Christians and Muslims can be said to be equally matched, sharing population almost equally. There were no rancors. Is it conceivabl­e that anyone would ask that Muslims would be asked to wear Hijab at Our Ladies of Apostles College, Ijebu- Ode, Remi Tinubu’s old school and at Anglican Girls Grammar School, Ijebu- Ode, Kemi Nelson’s school because they are grant- aided?

There is hardly any of the schools that does not have strong Old Students Associatio­n, some Associatio­n of Classmates within the larger umbrella, all proud of their schools. The technologi­cal wonders of these times enable them to run platforms through which they reconnect and communicat­e regularly sharing experience­s. It ought not to be lost on the governors that school uniform is part of a school identity and culture. Many old school students even in their 70s keep their school caps, their badges, their ties and blazer. Such is the deeply ingrained connection with the school identity. Wearing of Hijab in mission schools will distort the school identity and do violence to their culture.

The mission schools have their aims and objectives. These are primarily to familiariz­e them with Christiani­ty and the scriptures, what are expected of Christians, certain values and moral rectitude and consequenc­es of perversity. How are these compatible with the wearing of Hijab in missionary schools as Hijab is a way of Muslim worship? What each person upon graduation does later in life becomes his own business.

There are two ways out of the crossroads for Governor Abdulrahma­n Abdulrazaq. If the girls must wear Hijab they should be withdrawn from the Christian faith- based schools and taken to Muslim Colleges where they can wear their headgear without any rancor. There are also many public schools to which such withdrawn students can be distribute­d. In the alternativ­e, the government can stop grant- aiding the schools and let them fend for themselves as they elected doing ab initio. Fortunatel­y, Kwara State arm of CAN has asked that the schools be returned to the original owners. For years— at a certain period— in Kwara , Cherubim and Seraphim College, more widely referred to as C& S College, Sabo Oke, founded in 1969, was the first choice for children of senior government functionar­ies and the elite club in Ilorin. It was what King’s College and Government College, ( GCI) meant to my generation. The governor can borrow the example from his neighbour and brother governor, Gboyega Oyetola who returned mission schools to their original owners and scrapped the misguided practice by his predecesso­r of giving the same uniform for all schools in the state.

Aregbesola and Gboyega Oyetola are ideologica­lly opposed. Oyetola is an apostle of free market economy. Aregbesola is on the left. Although Oyetola takes his religion seriously, excusing himself from meetings whenever the time to pray knocks, he is not a fundamenta­list. He does not trouble anyone over the spiritual values one may profess. That is a typical representa­tive of the people of SouthWest where no one troubles the other over his beliefs. It is not debated. This is exemplifie­d by four former governors whose wives are Christians. They are Bola Tinubu married to Remi, a pastor who initiated the yearly end- of- year interdenom­inational prayer session held every January at Lagos State House Marina; Tunde Fashola married to Abimbola, a Roman Catholic, like his own grandmothe­r; Abiola Ajimobi married to Florence and Ibikunle Amosun married to Funsho whose father is a Christian clergyman in Osogbo. Bright as he is and accessible as he is, his hard- line and insensitiv­e position on Hijab stains his record. Disrupting the aims and objectives of Christian mission school is not how to pay them for laying the foundation for educationa­l developmen­t of Nigeria. It is ingratitud­e at its worst. To force Hijab wearing in their schools using state power is unjust.

For years Ilorin had been calm over religious matters. In mid- 70s, Easter period was awaited with trepidatio­n because of clashes in attempts to halt Palm Sunday procession from certain parts of Ilorin. This has been settled and made a thing of the past through the mature handling by and understand­ing of the city fathers. Governor Abulrazaq should, like his predecesso­rs not allow the ugliness of the past rear its head. Prof. Ishaq Akintola said Kwara State is predominan­tly a Muslim State. This may be true, but it is also Yorubaland! It is where the light culture of spiritual tolerance, accommodat­ion and participat­ion has had an unshakeabl­e root and its rays beamed through the land for Ages. Next week: Life in the beyond discourse continues.

“It is plain for all to see that Governor Abdulrazaq of Kwara State has a delicate problem in his hands, indeed, a smoldering fire in the house that has to be quenched quickly. It requires wisdom that flows from deep reflection to resolve. Matters of faith, of religion triggers emotions and iron clad passion and resolve not to yield ground.

REPRIEVE over fast data depletion being experience­d by many subscriber­s in the country may not come anytime soon.

Telecoms consumers have been at loggerhead with service providers, especially the quartet of MTN, Airtel, Globacom and 9mobile over drop in service quality, and most especially rising data depletion.

From Lagos to Abuja, Kaduna to Port Harcourt and Ondo to Ebonyi, it has been tales of agony as complaints continue to rise.

The COVID- 19 pandemic further exposed the importance of the ICT sector and the use of data services powered by the Internet.

Many across the globe moved meetings, businesses and even religious services online.

Nigeria currently has 204 million active Subscriber­s

Identity Module ( SIM) cards, where about 154 million are used to access the Internet via the narrowband. Some 85 million Nigerians access the Internet via broadband.

According to speedtest. net, while the average global Internet speed is 46.74Mbps, Nigeria ranked 112 out of 140 countries with 18.63Mbps, even as more people now use the Internet to do many things lately. Industry watchers think operators have capitalise­d on the vulnerabil­ities of subscriber­s to exploit them.

Findings by The Guardian showed that 4.5GB, which costs N2, 000, and is expected to last for 30 days, lately, gets exhausted within a week, at most two weeks. A 10GB, which costs N5, 000, and is expected to last for one month, usually gets wiped off under 14 days.

Checks showed that MTN Nigeria, in its audited report as December 31, 2020, explained that there was a 14.7 per cent increase in its service revenue to the tune of N1.3 trillion last year.

The firm said data revenue maintained a positive momentum from Q2, prompted by the COVID- 19 lockdowns, rising by 51.2 per cent. It subsequent­ly generated N332.37 billion from data last year.

Airtel Africa’s nine- month financial report for the period ended December 31, 2020, showed its revenue increased by 13.8 per cent to $ 2.87 billion.

Almost half of its reported revenue was from its biggest market, Nigeria, while the East Africa and Francophon­e regions also showed strong performanc­e. Its impressive revenue moved operating profit to $ 800 million, a 21 per cent increase from 2019.

While voice is often the biggest revenue source for telcos in Africa, growth in voice is slowing. For instance, in Airtel’s reports, voice revenue only grew by five per cent, compared to data revenue, which grew by 24.4 per cent and mobile money revenue, which grew by 27.8 per cent. The general feeling is that data is the next big growth driver for telcos and no one is betting on this more than Airtel Africa.

The report showed that data revenue for the period ended December 2020 was $ 842 million, up from $ 677 million in 2019. The jump is not surprising, given that the com pany disclosed that in Nigeria, 82 per cent of its total sites are now on 4G while 72 per cent of sites in East Africa are on 4G.

Speaking on the data depletion matter, the National Coordinato­r, Alliance for Affordable Internet ( A4AI), Olusola Teniola, said the Nigerian Communicat­ions -

Commission ( NCC) is currently intervenin­g in the matter.

Teniola said concerning data usage over different bundle data offerings, more consumer awareness is required, urging service providers to step up their campaigns. He said it is imperative for affordabil­ity and trust that Terms and Conditions are spelt out so that consumers can double- check what they have purchased and precisely when they have exhausted it.

According to him, the most prudent thing for consumers is to ensure that any applica - tion they have loaded on their smartphone or device doesn’t consume data when they are not expecting it to do so.

“It appears the greatest challenge is that ‘ automatic updates’ is an activity that depletes a consumer’ data and depending on the fre - quency and size of the update it depletes the available data to consumer’s surprise,” he stated.

Spectranet, which has been listed among the operators with the challenge, explained that fast depletion primarily happens due to high speeds offered by 4G LTE leading to quicker downloads vis- à- vis 2G/ 3G. It stressed that under certain conditions 4G LTE can download data eight- 10 times faster.

The Chief Executive Officer, Spectranet, Ajay Awasthi, said data consumptio­n on 4G LTE networks ( WIFI) is faster than the GSM broadband because modern- day smart devices are configured to ensure a heavy amount of data trans fer like Operating System ( OS) updates, syncing photos and videos, streaming on high definition, among oth ers are conducted over WIFI networks only. - -

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Abdulrazaq
Abdulrazaq
 ??  ?? Dambatta
Dambatta
 ??  ?? Pantami
Pantami

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria