Tag: Crisis

  • Education sector crisis: A future that is ruined – By Dakuku Peterside

    Education sector crisis: A future that is ruined – By Dakuku Peterside

    Nigeria is at a tipping point regarding security, human capacity development and economic growth. However, the biggest challenge we face as a country is not about the challenges of today but a bleak future stirring Africa’s biggest economy and the most populous Black nation in the face. Looking beyond the 2023 general elections, one sees our leaders’ deliberate insensitivity and indifference at various levels to the destruction of one sector that offers us hope to safeguard and recover the future. That sector is the educational sector.

    In the last month, Nigeria’s education sector crisis has become more evident – ASUU, which has been on strike since February 14, 2022, has extended the same by three months. ASUP, the Union of Polytechnic lecturers, have commenced strike action. There is zero public school registration for WAEC in Sokoto and Zamfara states, and some candidates in some southeast states cannot participate in UMTE examinations due to IPOB sit-at-home orders. There are other horrendous developments in the education sector. What is freighting is the inability of our policymakers to connect the monumental rot and negligence of the education sector today to our bleak future.

    Nigeria seems to be retrogressing in all aspects of education and skill acquisition. The net quantity and quality of education in Nigeria compared with past decades, given our population and economy, is negative. The products of our education system cannot measure against their opposite numbers in India , China or the EU.

    The education sector crisis has been made worse by the intractable insecurity in various parts of Nigeria, the girl child education inequity, and poverty that has made quality education unaffordable to many Nigerians. There is total loss of confidence by stakeholders in our education system.

    Loss of confidence in Nigeria’s education is led by the political and other elite class . Over 95% of the elite leaders in government, business and technocratic professions are educating their children in tertiary institutions in Europe and the US. Consequently , there is hardly any serious policy discussion about education in Nigeria.

    Despite notable interventions of the UNICEF and the Nigerian government, we still have 18.5 million children out of school in the country, the second-largest number in the world.

    Neglecting the education of the present generation of Nigerians would, in many ways, endanger the prosperity of the future. But does anybody care? Educating young people today will determine how much progress we make as a country. It is evident that with the neglect or near-total collapse of education, the future of our society is uncertain or may be gloomy.

    Our education sector needs quantum overhaul that targets educational outcomes. We need improvement starting from primary education, where we see many children out of school. Secondary education needs a total overhaul, where we see declining standards and low attainment in national exams like NECO and WAEC. The complete collapse of the higher education sector, where workers have incessant strike actions, leading to half-baked graduates who are grossly untrainable and unemployable, needs immediate attention.

    Education has suffered from insecurity at the basic primary and secondary levels in most parts of the country. The “unknown gunmen” and IPOB agitators have terrorised the southeast and forced a Monday sit-at-home. This problem has affected schools in the five southeast states where 20% of education is not provided each week . Students in southeast states missed examinations scheduled for Mondays nationally during necessary national examinations like WAEC, NECO and UMTE.

    As if this is not shocking enough, in Sokoto and Zamfara states, students in public schools did not register for the WAEC examination this year either because the government did not pay, or they are not writing the examination because of various mitigating factors. This anomaly indicates retrogression in teaching, learning and examination for certification.

    In other parts of the North, the uptake of the WAEC examination is minimal, even with some state governments paying for the students. Students in IDP camps are worrying more about survival than getting an education. Government poorly funds most government schools, and they owe teachers’ salaries.

    Most government schools in the south of Nigeria are overcrowded and always attended by children from poor backgrounds who could not afford the prohibitive cost of private primary and secondary education for their children.

    As the crisis in the education sector deepens, the attention of our political leaders swings between elections and politics. Elections and politics are essential and must receive due attention, but that must not detract attention from the education sector, which is undergoing decay and needs urgent and immediate attention.

    It is disturbing to note that the generation that had good government-funded basic education in the ‘80s and ’90s is struggling to function productively nowadays; how much more will the children of this generation with poor education or no education in some cases, become productive at all. The irony is on all of us.

    The rich and middle class have insulated themselves from this problem. Children of people in these classes go to private schools abroad or private schools at home, which continues to widen the gap between the poor and the rich and invariably creates inequality.

    The children of the poor are hard done. In the past, education was the greatest leveller. Children of the poor often meet and outcompete children from affluent backgrounds in schools. They learn the confidence that comes with knowing that they are as good as anybody with hard work and intelligence, no matter their family background.

    Our tertiary education sector is comatose with ASUU, and ASUP strikes. The students are unproductive at home or sometimes a nuisance to their communities. Imagine the impact on the quality of education of these students.

    Governments at all levels have an indifferent attitude towards the educational crisis in the country. They have not articulated better ways of managing education to provide needed quality education for our children. Education policies are either not fit for purpose or not yielding the desired results, and education monitoring institutions are moribund at best where they exist.

    It is disheartening that private education providers buy and sell quality education in many states. In some middle class and working-class families, tuition fees and other school-related charges take a chunk of their income.

    The recommended average percentage of GDP on total government and private expenditure on education is 5% of the GDP. Most countries in the developed world spend even more than this average on education. For example, “among the 34 OECD countries reporting data in 2015, 17 countries spent more than the average percentage (5%) of GDP on total government and private expenditures on education institutions for OECD countries. Norway spent the most on education as a percentage of GDP at 6.4%, followed by New Zealand at 6.3%, the United Kingdom at 6.2%, and the United States at 6.1 percent,” according to UNESCO. However, data from UNESCO also shows that education expenditure (% of GDP) in Nigeria was 0.85% as of 2017. This statistic shows the crass negligence our education sector is facing from all sections of the government. This must change!

    Two futures are possible with our political leaders’ indifference to education issues. The first is where we continue to relegate education to the rear of our development agenda; our youthful population, which ought to be a demographic advantage, becomes a burden. We will entrench and reinforce generational inequality and possibly poverty, insecurity, and most importantly, dismantle the building block of the future. Conversely, we are setting our country up for endless, perennial crises because of the collapse of essential building blocks of a functional society. Either way, we cannot win.

    We know that the growth of the human mind and the broadening of the human intellect reflect his immediate environment’s physical development. Therefore, the development’s physicality is just a reflection and reification of the extent of our mental and intellectual development. This idea underscores the importance of training and education as a key to societal growth.

    We see this in what happens to a developed environment when undeveloped minds are allowed to inhabit them, and they trash them and reduce the place to the extent of the level of development of their minds and converse is the case too. This fact underscores the importance of education to the development of Nigeria.

    The children we do not educate today will pose a danger in the future, and they may fuel insecurity, criminality, and total dependency on the state for survival, not to mention the lost opportunity cost in productivity they would have given were they educated. Now is the time to pay attention and call for a “state of emergency” in our education sector.

    We must bring all ideas, talents, skills, and resources to the table to resolve some of these crises threatening to mar the future of the next generation of Nigerians. It is not just a policy and monetary issue. We need to focus on teacher education to improve the quality of teachers and periodic testing and retraining. Teachers’ promotion will be tied quality of their teaching, personal development, and impact of teaching on students. We need to provide them with the teaching resources and incentives they need to do a good job. Individual states should set independent standards for teachers’ accreditation in their jurisdictions.

    We must provide all forms of financial and psychological incentives to teachers. We must ringfence their benefits and emoluments in both federal and state budgets and never allow a situation where the government owe them salaries. Teachers’ reward must be here “on earth and not in heaven.” We should pay them wages when due and pay them a living wage. We must review teachers’ pay based on current economic realities and attract the best to the teaching profession.

    The future we want to build for our children will be worse than what we have now if we do not prioritise education. A stitch in time, they say, saves nine. We must focus and refocus all our physical and intellectual energies to rescue our education from total shambles and, that way, safeguard the future we desire.

  • BREAKING: FG pulls basketball out of international competitions

    BREAKING: FG pulls basketball out of international competitions

    President Muhammadu Buhari has announced the withdrawal of the Nigerian basketball from international basketball competition.

    The withdrawal is in connection to the unending crisis bedeviling the sport in the country.

    Recall that elections into Basketball federation held in two different locations Abuja and Benin and it produced two factional leaders.

    Until the matter is resolved Basketball in the country remains shut a source told NewsGuru.com

    However, Some Nigerian Basketball players have stormed the office of Nigeria’s Youth and Sports Development Minister, Sunday Dare, to register the alleged unwillingness of the ministry to resolve the post election impasse rocking the Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF), since January 31, 2022.

    The visibly angry players led by the Players Representative in the Igoche Mark’s faction of the NBBF Board, Stanley Gumut, said the procession to the Sports Minister’s office was part of resolutions reached at their meeting held last Tuesday.

    Gumut, said at the meeting that the players were agitated that the ministry appears to be indifferent while the leadership tussle takes a toll on their individual careers and hampers the growth of the domestic component of Nigerian basketball.

    He stressed that only the Mark D Ball Basketball Championship has kept them busy all through the months.

    The Basketballers posited that there is uncertainty hovering over their career after the Mark

  • Security alert: Another ENDSARS like crisis is looming over fuel scarcity – DSS raises alarm

    Security alert: Another ENDSARS like crisis is looming over fuel scarcity – DSS raises alarm

    The Department of State Services (DSS)on Saturday raised an alarm that a similar protest in the mould of ENDSARS is looming particularly in the North Central axis of Nigeria.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports this was contained in a statement issued by Dr Peter Afunanya, the Public Relations Officer on Saturday.

    The spokesman said the aim was to cause ethno-religious crisis, ignite reprisals and heat up the polity.

    The DSS said the sponsors have mobilised foot soldiers and held several meetings in and outside the target areas.

    The agency said students, striking lecturers, labour unions, disgruntled individuals and strategic groups are to be used “to exploit the global energy situation to carry out a mass protest like the ENDSARS.”

    Afunanya noted that this is despite ongoing efforts by the government to address the issues.

    The Service is also aware of a plot to use students, striking University teachers, labour unions, disgruntled individuals and strategic groups as well as exploit the global energy situation to carry out a mass protest like the ENDSARS. This is despite ongoing efforts by Government to address the issues”, Afunanya stated.

    While the Service views the machination as unpatriotic, it added that, it is on the trail of the agents of destabilisation who are desirous of using violence to achieve ulterior goals.

    According to the DSS spokesman, “though we have emplaced measures to disrupt these tendencies, we warn the ring leaders and their cohorts to desist from acts capable of causing a breakdown of law and order, stressing tha the public should be rest assured that the Service will, in conjunction with other security agencies, go after the sponsors of this scheme and ensure the law takes it course.

    “Citizens are advised not only to engage according to rules but should resist persuasions to be used to destroy their own country. Those who may wish to go contrary to the law will, however, face the consequences”, the statement noted.

  • APC crisis: Our party intact and functional as originally constituted – says scribe, Akpanudoedehe

    APC crisis: Our party intact and functional as originally constituted – says scribe, Akpanudoedehe

    Apparently trying to mellow down the crisis engulfing the APC, National Secretary, APC Caretaker/Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee, Sen James Akpanudoedehe on Tuesday said the party is intact and functional as originally constituted.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports this is coming many days after Sani Bello, Governor of Niger State was initially declared acting chairman of the caretaker committee.

    It could be recalled that INEC had also turned down an invitation by Bello to oversee a scheduled NEC meeting informing him that his committee was not qualified to hold NEC.

    In the release issued by the APC scribe he stated that: “CECPC is intact and functional as originally constituted.

    “That delivering a seamlessly successful National Convention for the APC on March 26, 2022 is top on priority for the CECPC and we shall continue to execute such assignments as are legal pending the return of the Chairman who is on his way back to the country and shall resume Office on arrival with the full support of all members and other stakeholders.

    Adding that: “We are grateful to INEC for her firm guidance in the entire circumstances.

    “Meanwhile, the party has engaged a team of senior lawyers to address a purported court order halting the planned APC National Convention.

    “We hereby call on the Judiciary to give the matter the needed and expedient attention in our bid to vacate the purported Court order and allow for the conduct of a transparent and rancour-free National Convention deserving of our great party, APC.

    Read full release below:

    PRESS RELEASE BY THE CARETAKER/ EXTRAORDINARY CONVENTION PLANNING COMMITTEE (CECPC) OF THE ALL PROGRESSIVES CONGRESS (APC) ON RECENT EVENTS AND THE STATE OF LEADERSHIP IN THE PARTY

    Gentlemen and Ladies of the Press,

    The Caretaker/Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) of the All Progressives Congress (APC) under the Chairmanship of His Excellency, Governor Mai Mala Buni of Yobe State, makes this Press Release to clarify the events of last week and reassure the membership and stakeholders of the Party, as well as the Nigerian people in general, that the Governing Party is crisis-free, strong and remains united in giving the country the transformative leadership and good governance which she promised them.

    The CECPC therefore informs the Press and the General Public as follows:

    1. That the CECPC was appointed, and has always done her best, to steer the affairs of the APC in line with the mandate invested in her at inauguration by the National Executive Council (NEC) of the All Progressives Congress.

    2. That on the 28th day of February, 2022 the CECPC Chairman took a long-delayed trip abroad on health grounds, leaving behind written authorisation for other members of the CECPC to continue work in his absence, particularly the day to day management of the APC.

    3. That in his absence, sundry activities earlier scheduled for action appeared to develop fresh urgency in order to satisfy the Timetable for the 2023 General Elections released by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), thus galvanizing some within the CECPC to act in their best understanding of both the situation and the leadership dynamics in the Committee/Party.

    4. That all such actions were clearly identified at all times as happening in an acting or proxy capacity, and under the auspices of the substantive Chairman, His Excellency, Governor Mai Mala Buni, contrary to widespread speculations that the Chairman, Secretary or some other officials of the CECPC have been removed from Office or otherwise replaced.

    5. That the CECPC is intact and functional as originally constituted.

    6. That delivering a seamlessly successful National Convention for the APC on March 26, 2022 is top on priority for the CECPC and we shall continue to execute such assignments as are legal pending the return of the Chairman who is on his way back to the country and shall resume Office on arrival with the full support of all members and other stakeholders.

    We are grateful to INEC for her firm guidance in the entire circumstances.

    Meanwhile, the party has engaged a team of senior lawyers to address a purported court order halting the planned APC National Convention. We hereby call on the Judiciary to give the matter the needed and expedient attention in our bid to vacate the purported Court order and allow for the conduct of a transparent and rancour-free National Convention deserving of our great party, APC.

    The Caretaker/Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) hereby restates absolute loyalty to the APC, thanks the National Organs and leadership of our Party led by His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR and reassures our members and citizens that the Party is stronger than ever before and poised to extend her winning streak since 2015 into 2023 and beyond.

  • Revealed why Buhari want Gov Buni fired, replaced by Niger Gov, Bello

    Revealed why Buhari want Gov Buni fired, replaced by Niger Gov, Bello

    Finally, TheNewsGuru.com can now reveal that the final straw which angered President Muhammadu Buhari, and led to the replacement Of Gov Mai Buni as interim chair of All Progressives Congress, APC was the court judgment which led to the postponement of the Congress of the party.

    The President was said to be so livid that he summarily sacked the interim executive of the party until he was prevailed upon to soft pedal since he did not have the constitutional powers to summarily dismiss the interim executives.

    It is not not clear how the party settled on Governor of Niger State, Abubakar Bello as Sole Administrator to replace the Buni executives.

    Nevertheless, TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reliably gathered that Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello has taken over the party as ‘sole administrator’ following the replacement of Mai Mala Buni as chairman of the caretaker committee.

    A source privy to this development told TNG that” Buni has left Nigeria on what those loyal to him revealed was a ‘medical trip.’

    But sources within the party said that as at Sunday night that the presidency and the APC governors were perturbed at Buni’s conduct and collusion with a few colleagues to undermine the interest of the APC.

    Buni as the caretaker Committee Chairman had been on a rollercoaster mission piloting the affairs of APC with no proper focus for almost two years after the former Chairman Adams Oshiomhole was fired through the courts.

    The allegedly sacked Buni had without end failed to conduct the party’s convention after several postponements making the party to remain in an oscillating mode till date.

    The positive move he made as caretaker Committee Chairman was the party’s registration of members that almost led to a disaster.

  • BREAKING: First batch of Nigerians arrive Abuja from Ukraine

    BREAKING: First batch of Nigerians arrive Abuja from Ukraine

    The first batch of Ukraine based Nigerians stranded in the country following invasion by Russia have arrived in Abuja, Nigeria’s federal capital.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Ukraine based Nigerians arrived in the country on Friday morning from Romania.

    Max Air flight VM602 from Bucharest landed in Abuja at about 7:10 AM with a next flight from Hungary currently being expected.

    “To God be the glory, Max Air evacuation flight VM602 from Bucharest touched down in Abuja,” Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Chairman, Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM) confirmed.

    According to a source, the federal government will give $100 each to the Ukraine returnees upon their arrival.

  • Ukraine crisis: FG postpones evacuation of Nigerians from Poland

    Ukraine crisis: FG postpones evacuation of Nigerians from Poland

    The federal government (FG) of Nigeria has postponed the evacuation of Nigerians from Poland following the invasion of Ukraine by Russia.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official, Bolaji Akinremi made this known on Thursday.

    According to Akinremi, an Air Peace charter flight scheduled to evacuate Nigerians fleeing Ukraine from Poland on Thursday was postponed.

    The flight was postponed due to a delay in preparing passengers for the check-in process, and has now been scheduled for Friday morning.

  • We tried to avoid invading Ukraine – Russian foreign minister

    We tried to avoid invading Ukraine – Russian foreign minister

    Russia tried to prevent the current development of events around Ukraine, but the West preferred not to notice this and now forgets about its responsibility.

    Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Thursday.

    The diplomat called the Russian operation a forced move, after all the efforts of negotiations, compromises, clarifications and explanations failed

    “We tried to prevent this result for many years, not weeks, not months, using all the possibilities and all the tactics.

    “But can they really sink to such a level that they do not take responsibility for their own complicity in the collapse of Ukraine,” Zakharova said.

    “Western countries cannot pretend that they are not involved in this or they were not the ideologists of the intra-Ukrainian confrontation and confrontation of Ukraine, primarily, with Russia,” she added.

    Commenting on the anti-Russian sanctions, the diplomat said that it is difficult to judge how long-term the sanctions will turn out to be but everything can still return to normalcy.

  • Ukraine crisis: Russia retaliates closure of airspace; 35 countries affected

    Ukraine crisis: Russia retaliates closure of airspace; 35 countries affected

    In response to the decision by multiple countries to close their airspace to Russia, Russian aviation authority, Rosaviatsiya, on Monday announced that it was closing Russian airspace to 35 countries.

    Countries affected by the indefinite ban include all EU member states and Canada.

    The EU took the decision to ban Russian aircraft from its airspace as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

    Humanitarian flights were exempted from the ban, while exceptions can also be made in other cases via Russian government ministries.

  • FG summon Russian, Ukrainian envoys

    FG summon Russian, Ukrainian envoys

    The Federal Government on Friday in Abuja summoned the Russian Ambassador to Nigeria, Alexei Shebarshin and his Ukrainian counterpart, Kirdoda Valerii over the raging conflict between their countries and the need to evacuate Nigerians living there.

    The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, met with the envoys separately behind closed doors.

    Onyeama said he told the Russian envoy, Shebarshin that Nigeria as a country would not condone the violation of the territorial integrity of a United Nations member state, a country with which Nigeria has diplomatic relations.

    The minister also said that he told Shebarshin that Nigeria wanted Russia to revert to the status quo before the military action and to prioritise diplomacy and dialogue.

    “This is really the position of the government and also, that we have 5,600 Nigerians in Ukraine and we are very concerned about what we are hearing and what we are seeing regarding missiles and bombs about the safety of Nigerian citizens there and also that we would like to be able to evacuate them.

    “He said that this would be communicated to his headquarters and that obviously, they consider Nigeria a friendly country.

    “The Russian envoy also said that they would do nothing to harm Nigerians and assured me that their action is targeted at military installations and that they are not about to start attacking civilian areas and so forth,” the minister said.

    Onyeama added that the Russian envoy insisted that civilians were not being targeted and that hopefully, it won’t last long.

    Speaking after his meeting with the Ukrainian envoy, Onyeama said the government sympathised with Ukraine regarding its situation as a country and as a people, in view of the heavy bombardment, which has led to loss of lives.

    Onyeama told the Ukrainian envoy that Nigeria has more than 5,000 students and ither citizens in the country and very concerned about their safety and welfare.

    “I told the Ukrainian envoy that we want the cooperation of the Government of Ukraine to do whatever is possible to ensure their safety and security and to also seek advice as to how the evacandion can be facilitated,” Onyeama added.

    Onyeama also said the envoy told him that that the Ukrainian government has given all the residents and civilians, specific instructions about how to stay safe and the measures to take.

    Onyeama added that the Nigerian Embassy in Ukraine will also act as a coordinating mechanism in reaching out to all Nigerians in Ukraine and ensure that they adhered to all the advice and directives.

    On the evacuation of Nigerians in Ukraine, Onyeama said the issue could only come up when the airports reopened.

    Onyeama said that during discussions, the Russian envoy stated that they would possibly also see some airports as military targets.

    The minister said that they also discussed road travel to facilitate the evacuation, even though some Nigerians were able to get into neighbouring countries such as Holland.

    The Russian envoy however told Onyeama that there might be risk involved, while also saying that Russia was mindful of the civilians from foreign countries and that they would take all the necessary measures to ensure their security.

    The Ukrainian envoy expressed gratitude to the Government and people of Nigeria for their support.

    “Right now, we are in a very difficult situation, but we are fighting against the aggression and we believe that we will all win,” the Ukrainian envoy said.

    Valerii also said Nigerian students in Ukraine were in the same situation as anybody else on the territory of Ukraine.

    “Ukrainian Government does not differentiate between people on the basis of their nationality and that is the best effort to protect everybody.

    “Currently, the evacuation of Nigerian students is not possible because it is not safe to fly on the sky of Ukraine.

    “As soon as it is safe to fly on the sky of Ukraine, we will join the Embassy of Nigeria in Ukraine and jointly with the Nigerian Government, we will arrange for the evacuation of Nigerian Students,” Valeri said.

    FG meets with Envoys of G7 countries over Russia-Ukraine crisis

    Similarly, the Federal Government has met with envoys of the G7 countries in Nigeria, expressing worries over the Russian-Ukraine conflict with a call for peace to resolve the conflict.

    Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, met with the envoys on Friday in Abuja, saying that the Nigeria government call for peace and use of diplomacy in resolving all differences.

    Onyeama said that the Federal Government had stated that Nigeria does not condone the approach of aggression by Russia, calling on Russia to pull back.

    “Peace and diplomacy to be prioritised by both sides.

    “We support every effort being made to stop the aggression and Russian troops to return to Russia,” Onyeama said.

    Speaking to journalists after the closed door meeting, German Ambassador to Nigeria, Birgitt Ory, who is also chair of the G7 Group, appreciated the African Union on its statement on the situation.

    Ory who also commended Nigeria for putting in its weight, said Nigeria is a very important voice that the world needed to hear.

    He said that what is also clear is the unanimous condemnation of the attacks by all United Nations member states in the light of Russia’s military action.

    Ory said there will be resolutions in the United Nations Security Council, as well as the General Assembly and other United Nations fora such as the Human Rights Council where Nigeria is a very important voice and member.

    Also in attendance were; United States Ambassador to Nigeria, Mary Beth Leonard; British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Catriona Laing; Head of the European Union Delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Samuela Isopi.

    Others were the representatives of the Embassies of Japan and Canada.