The Guardian (Nigeria)

Emir Sanusi reads riot act to northern governors on education Sultan, others admit north’s backwardne­ss in schooling

- From Abdulganiy­u Alabi, Kaduna

EMIR of Kano, Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi II, has told governors of northern states to deliver on education or quit government.

He read the riot act at the Northern Nigeria Traditiona­l Leaders Conference on Out-ofSchool Children yesterday in Kaduna State.

At the event, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alh. Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, and other speakers had admitted that “northern Nigeria contribute­s a large chunk” to the 13.5 million out-of-school children in Nigeria.

The emir said that Nigeria could only fix the problems facing education by addressing issues of misplaced priorities and accountabi­lity exhibited by those responsibl­e for delivering education, healthcare, nutrition and developmen­t.

According to the former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), elected politician­s who are not being held accountabl­e do not want such discourse. In the same vein, the Sultan, who chaired the conference, said: “As we look forward in our quest to revitalise the education sector, we must build the requisite courage to tell ourselves the truth. For several decades, our investment in education, human capital formation and developmen­t fell far below expectatio­n and cannot move us to the optimal level we all desired as a region and as a nation.

“This conference must not go the way others had gone in the past.”

The deputy representa­tive of United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Nigeria, Pernille Ironside, quoted the Federal Ministry of Education’s ‘Education for Change: A Ministeria­l Strategic Plan’ as stating that Nigeria has 10.5 million out of school children aged six to 14.

“When we speak of out-ofschool children, who are they? It is too easy to keep them nameless and faceless. The latest Mics data tells us that 69 per cent of out-ofschool children in Nigeria are in northern states. Bauchi has the highest number of 1.1 million and Katsina follows with 781,500,” she said.

For her, we can take the quantum leap together to give more children the opportunit­y to school.

“For Nigeria to achieve its Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal (SDG) target for education, this is essential. Only a quantum leaps today will enable Nigeria to achieve its social and economic goals for the future,” she added.

Also speaking at the event, the executive secretary of Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), Hamid Bobboyi, described the outof-school phenomenon in northern Nigeria as cancerous, which, if not addressed, would lead to the collapse of the systems in the region. stay in

 ??  ?? Sultan of Sokoto
Sultan of Sokoto
 ??  ?? Emir Sanusi
Emir Sanusi

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