The Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has
disclosed that his administration decided to return schools to missionaries and
their original owners to checkmate the
activities of those he described as profiteers and undisciplined elements in
the system.
He added that it was part of the quests for moral
and value restoration to secondary
school education and rid the schools of decadent practices like internet fraud locally
called 'Yahoo', truancy and examination malpractices.
Fayemi also dispelled the fear that the federal
government-powered school feeding programme had been cancelled, saying the
removal of the policy from the office of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to a
newly formed Ministry of Humanitarian Services caused the seeming delay.
Fayemi stated this in Ado Ekiti on Wednesday at a homecoming/reunion
press conference held by the 1975-80 set of Christ School in Ado Ekiti, marking
the 40th anniversary since leaving the secondary school.
The governor, who doubles as the president of the set,
applauded the alumni across the state for partnering the government to raise
the standard of education through the provision of facilities and funding, saying the state government
would create a more coordinated platform for useful engagement with them.
Fayemi said: "Education was not at the level
we are now during our time, but we shouldn’t be despair as the high level of
dialogue and partnership among stakeholders the state government is midwifing
would lead to the restoration of the value system..
"We have no reason not to achieve qualitative
education. During our time, we didn't enjoy free education until 1979, but we
paid affordable school fee. We paid N20 per term.
"Education is a right and not a privilege, and
that was why I introduced free education, and now we are returning some schools
to missionaries and the original owners, who are not also profiteers. They will
charge fee reasonably. We are ultimately returning schools to those who can
provide discipline to the system.
"We are also incorporating the alumni
associations into our developmental agenda.
I have received series of correspondences and communications from
religious organisations like the Methodist, Nurudeen, Catholic and Anglican, that
they wanted their schools back.”
Fayemi further assured the alumni that the school
feeding programme would commence in
Ekiti State as soon as the new federal ministry restart the implementation across all participating states.
Speaking about school enrolment in the state,
Fayemi said: "In 2014, we had 96 percent enrolment, but in 2018, when I
came back as governor, Ekiti State was the least in the South-west region. But
today, we have raised it to over 75 percent, because of the free education
initiatives of the state government.
"It has become a policy now in the state that if
a child of school age is found in the streets during school hour, his parents
will have a lot to answer. Apart from renovation and provisions of
instructional materials, the government is doing greatly in other areas."
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