THISDAY

Ogun Begins Payment of Cash Award to 100,000 Indigent Primary, Secondary Pupils

- James Sowole inAbeokuta

Ogun state government yesterday, flagged off the payment of N10,000 cash award to 100,000 primary and secondary school learners in the over 2, 000 public schools across the four divisions of the state.

The payment is in fulfilment of the promise made by the Governor Dapo Abiodun, to pay N10,000 to indigent pupils and students in the state's primary and secondary schools.

Speaking while monitoring the disburseme­nt of the money in some schools in Abeokuta, Commission­er for Education, Science and Technology, Prof. Abayomi Arigbabu noted that the payment was one of the strategies used by the governor to provide succour to parents as a result of the present economic situation in the country.

Arigbabu noted that the gesture was meant to provide succour to pupils and their parents.

He said: "In view of the economic realities in the country, the governor decided to provide succour to the people of the state using multiplici­ty approaches to achieve this.

"He believes that another strategy that could be used which has never been used by any government before is the health and education sectors to reach the populace. Through the education sector, you can truly reach out to those who need the palliative.

"We have over 2, 000 primary and secondary schools in all the four divisions of the state, and 100,000 learners in these schools would receive N10,00 each."

He emphasised that the government decided to pay through parents whose children are in public primary and secondary schools as the children do not have bank accounts due to their age. "As we meet and give the parents the governor's message, they are receiving the alert for payment. The governor's gesture is to support the parents in meeting their children's needs," he added.

On how the children were chosen, the commission­er maintained that the process was objective, adding that it was easy to come up with the list of indigent students as teachers who are part of the school system were given the burden to find the indigent students as they are the closest to them.

"That is why we have not involved anybody who is not in the school system. The school system is not political. Civil servants are not supposed to be politician­s, so the principals and the teachers have selected these children based on the fact that they have always seen them to be indigent students.

"How do they know them? These are children without shoes, some of them have torn uniforms, some don't have enough exercise books, and some can't even buy textbooks. There are a number of things they would have seen, some of them, it is these teachers that will be contributi­ng money to the support system.

"I can assure you that the children we have chosen are children that are indigent. To confirm that for you, a parent came to me, she said that her child in this school was chosen, but she has another child in another school that was not chosen. That is telling you that indigence is relative," he said.

He disclosed that 50,000 students of Ogun state origin in both public and private tertiary institutio­ns have been captured to be paid N50,000 each. The payment, he said, has started with about 20,000 students to be covered by the end of the week.

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