THISDAY

NHCR Decries Lack of Inclusive, Functional Education System for Nigerian Children

- In Abuja

Alex Enumah

The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has decried the lack of an inclusive and functional education system for Nigerian children both at the federal and state levels.

The acting Executive Secretary of the commission, Tony Ojukwu, who expressed the dismay, said in spite of all existing legal frameworks and commitment­s put in place to advance education, there is still a huge gap in its accessibil­ity.

Ojukwu made this known at a strategy meeting, organised by the Network of National Human Rights Institutio­ns in West Africa (NNHRI-WA) on promoting the right to education.

“One thing resonates in all the literature on the right to education, which is the fact that there is need for it to be accessible to all without any form of discrimina­tion.

“There is need for an inclusive and functional education system because most of the out-of-school children are children of nomadic groups, orphans, girls and children of poor parents, who lack economic prosperity.”

He identified factors such as strikes by teachers and students, poor quality of teachers, poor learning conditions, high cost of education, low enrolment and drop out due to early marriage or poverty as obstacles to the developmen­t of education in the country. He therefore appealed to government and stakeholde­rs to enforce existing laws that will provide free and quality education for all Nigerian children.

In her remarks, the acting Executive Secretary of NNHRI-WA, Mrs. Yemisi Akhile reminded participan­ts that the right to education is an alienable right which should be enjoyed by all as enshrined in major internatio­nal human rights instrument­s.

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