Wednesday 5 October 2016

WORLD TEACHERS’DAY. If you can write your name, then thanks to your teacher(s)

This year World Teachers’ Day marks the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the 1966 ILO/UNESCO  Recommendation concerning the Status of Teachers . It is also the first world Teachers’ Day (WTD) to be celebrated within the new Global Education 2030 Agenda adopted by the world community one year ago.

This year’s theme, “Valuing Teachers, Improving their Status”, embodies the fundamental principles of the fifty-year-old Recommendation while shining a light on the need to support teachers as reflected in the agenda’s  Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). A specific education goal, SDG4, pledges to “Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all”. 

Teachers are not only pivotal to the right to education they are key to achieving the targets set out in SDG4.



 If you can write your name, then thanks to your teacher(s)

The road map for the new agenda, the Education 2030 Framework for Action, highlights the fact that teachers are fundamental for equitable and quality education and, as such, must be “adequately trained, recruited and remunerated, motivated and supported within well-resourced, efficient and effectively governed systems”.

However, in order to achieve this goal, it is necessary not only to substantially increase the supply of qualified teachers but to motivate them by valuing their work. By 2030, 3.2 million more teachers will be required to achieve universal primary education and 5.1 million more in order to achieve universal lower secondary education.

UNESCO with the WTD convening agencies (ILO, UNICEF, UNDP, and EI) and the International Task Force on Teachers, dedicates this day to celebrating a unique intergovernmental commitment – the only international standard-setting instrument on teachers – and reaffirms its commitment to the value of the profession. 


Where is the Nigerian teacher globally?

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/10/world-teachersday-nigerian-teacher-globally/
Where is the Nigerian teacher globally?

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/10/world-teachersday-nigerian-teacher-globall

Monday 29 August 2016

Is Boko Haram actually defeated?

Chased from their homes, risking it all, these girl and boys had to cross forests, deserts and swamps with or without shoes. Escaping Boko Haram-related violence in Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon, they all have one thing in common: they managed to break free from violence.
“We are nomads. We were not in the camp when it was attacked by Boko Haram. I was out riding a camel with my father and saw people running away. He told me to start screaming if I saw any danger. The first night I slept on a tree. I was too scared.” Tahar Mohamed, 8, Chadian returnee from Niger.

“The gunshots woke me up. 18 people got killed and everybody was terrified. I could not walk as fast as my brothers, after some days, I was too tired and hungry to walk, especially with these slippers”. Fatime Hassan, 7. Chadian returnee from Niger.
“I didn’t have time to take my shoes. I had to walk all the way barefoot on the hot sand. After three days walking, we arrived in a village and sold what we had left in exchange of some cooked rice.” Ahmat Ali Makai, 12, Chadian returnee from Niger.
“They were all dressed in black and wore turbans. They destroyed everything. We ran. My feet were badly injured from walking in the bush barefoot with all those thorns. I had to go to the clinic so they could pull them out with pliers” Khadija Kaku, 15, Nigerian refugee in Chad. 
Is Boko Haram actually defeated?  

Wednesday 10 August 2016

A changed nation two years after Ebola

As our nation continues to rebuild, we have grown stronger in many ways.. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf , President of the Republic of Liberia.

During the course of 17 devastating months,the Ebola Epidemic  infected nearly 11,000 people in Liberia alone, killing more than 4,800 of them, 192 of whom were doctors, nurses and health practitioners. Today, two years after the World Health Organization declared  an international emergency, and several months since “zero cases” signaled our nightmare was truly over, the question that now keeps many people awake at night is: could it happen all over again?
Without a doubt, the outbreak has had a profound effect on our nation beyond the individual lives affected and taken by this dreadful disease. In the wake of 30 years of civil and political turmoil, Ebola challenged much of the progress we had made in rebuilding the country, leaving Liberia in a weakened state. Our health systems and infrastructure had nearly collapsed, we now have a desperate shortage of health workers, and it will take years for our economy to recover. And yet, despite such challenges, I believe we are indeed now better prepared to cope if Ebola does once again rear its ugly head, thanks largely to the strength of our people.
Even before Ebola struck, much of our basic infrastructure, including roads, water systems and power, was in great need of attention, particularly in rural areas. And now, despite our best efforts to provide better incentives for doctors and nurses, we have struggled to recruit sufficient medical staff in these remote regions.
The challenge is that as we continue with the process of rebuilding, we are doing so from a severely weakened position. Our economy has improved, but we are still not back to our level before the epidemic. Many of the investors that left during the outbreak have not returned. Lingering fears are still keeping them away. This threatens to further weaken us.If there is one thing we have learned from Ebola, it is that disease prevention requires investment.
Looking ahead, we are in a very different place. We still need support, but with the emergency over, Liberia’s fate is no longer determined by a merciless virus. Our people are now better informed about the nature of infectious disease. We have made huge progress in regaining the trust of the people,perhaps more so than Liberia has seen for decades. Indeed, just last month, for the first time in 13 years, Liberia took control of its own security forces. Peace is very much in our hands.
So, despite the incalculable suffering and horror we have endured, my belief is that we have ultimately emerged from this ordeal stronger and more unified. Today, as our nation grieves on this solemn anniversary, we know that we have to take primary responsibility to heal ourselves no one can help us to heal. But on the long road to recovery we will need continued partnership for rebuilding. 

--Ellen Johnson Sirleaf , President of the Republic of Liberia.

Tuesday 9 August 2016

Vision and determination are the keys that can unlock any door..congrats Margret Rumat Rumat Hassan


Her family was displaced by war. She missed out on several years of school and, at the age of 19, she is still finishing her primary education.
But Margret Rumat Rumat Hassan has a dream. Actually, two dreams.She hopes one day to become a teacher. And on August 15 she wants to make South Sudan proud when she competes as a 200 meters runner at the Olympic Games in Brazil.
Margret's inspirational story has been seen by millions around the world in a TV advert. The film shows South Sudanese supporters chanting her name as she prepares to represent the world's youngest country at its first Olympics.
The teenager from Wau city previously had to overcome the odds to compete as an independent athlete at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics in China.
In another film made for the Olympics' YouTube channel, Margret - who has five brothers and sisters - talked about her training regime.
She said: “Sometimes I wake up and I have breakfast and other days I don’t have breakfast. Sometimes I can just buy a banana."
South Sudan has only one sports facility that  meets international standards.
“We have no facilities in South Sudan for our athletes to practise," said the President of the South Sudan Olympic Committee, Lt. General Wilson Deng Kuoirot.
"There are no qualified trainers and sports equipment in the country. It is like teaching without a classroom."
 
To Margret Rumat Rumat Hassan, vision and determination are the keys that can unlock any door


The Indigenous student


The challenges faced by Indigenous student..


When Ahniwake Rose's 8-year-old daughter goes to her elementary school in November, she will have to explain to her teacher why she won't be participating in the Thanksgiving Day pageant. The fairy tale of a budding Indian-Pilgrim friendship, performed by non-Native students in craft-paper headdresses, disrespects her heritage — and it's something the little girl can't support.
Rose, who is Cherokee and Muscogee Creek, names this as just one moment of many that Indigenous students have to navigate in an educational system that renders them invisible.

Indigenous children around the world have long been denied  the right to celebrate their roots while getting a comprehensive education. They're up against major inequalities, from structural racism embedded in school systems to inaccurate retelling of history.

Aug. 9 is International day for Indigenous people a time to acknowledge the struggles and celebrate the resilience of Indigenous communities, while also shining a light on the inequalities they still face. This year, the theme is the right to education for Indigenous children around the globe.

While Indigenous communities have long-established ways of balancing tradition with education, advocates says the pressure to participate in mainstream — or non-Indigenous — life has made public schooling almost inevitable. But that doesn’t mean Indigenous students always feel welcomed or embraced.

According to UNESCO, there are an estimated  370 million Indigenous people in the world — nearly 5 percent of the global population, living across 90 countries. Their right to education is protected by the  United Nation Declaration on the  Right of Indigenous People of  which extends to most regions where Indigenous peoples live. But while it's written in print, advocates say education equality in practice is still a fallacy.

https://twitter.com/hashtag/WeAreIndigenousDay?src=hash

Friday 22 July 2016

Education is a right....



In a quiet suburban school in northwest London, young children are asked to imagine that they need to leave their homes because Britain is at war.
As they close their eyes and sit in silence, their teacher Teri-Louise O'Brien explains that there are 60 million displaced people in the world right now.
"Time to reflect: how would you feel if you had no home? Take a pen, and write your feelings on the paper."
One child scribbles, "I would feel heartbroken and sad" while another writes, "I would feel sad and neglected because I wouldn't have a warm place to sleep in".
The children, aged between six and 11, spend time discussing the differences between a refugee, an asylum seeker, a migrant and a displaced person.
O'Brien then switches off the lights before playing a short video of Syrian refugees living in camps in Lebanon and Jordan.
It's not a typical classroom lesson for students at Norbury School but it's one that some of the children are grateful for.
"It feels good to know what's happening in the news because I hate not knowing," said 10-year-old Naavya.
These internally displaced children and all others who have little or no access to schools need our help and we can not close our ears to their cry... Education is a right... 


Tuesday 19 July 2016

Garba Noma Junior secondary school... where students sit on the floor.

 School where students sit on the floor....


Garba Noma Junior secondary school.... Bauchi...
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY – NAN

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY – NAN

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY – NAN

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-secondary-school-students-sitting-floor-bauchi/
STUDENTS OF GARBA NOMA JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL, BAUCHI, SITTING ON THE FLOOR IN THEIR CLASSROOM ON MONDAY – NAN

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/photos-seco

Monday 18 July 2016

Child labour, not in our good. Every child should be in school.



Children who work are often separated from their families, exposed to dangerous substances, harsh working conditions and higher risk of mistreatment, violence, physical and psychological abuse. Child domestic workers are particularly vulnerable to trafficking, forced labour and sexual violence and many children face potential health consequences, including respiratory ailments, joint problems, loss of hearing and vision, poisoning and sexually transmitted diseases.
Globally, as many as 168 million children between ages 5-17 are child labourers, with 85 million in hazardous child labour – forced labour, trafficking and bonded labour.
Many child labourers never go to school or drop out. Lack of access to education perpetuates a cycle of exploitation, illiteracy and poverty – limiting future options and forcing children to accept low wage work as adults and to raise their own children in poverty. Despite these consequences, there are still 46 countries that do not legally protect children under the age of 18 from performing hazardous work.

Education is the best tool for preventing child labour. We will not eliminate child labour without scaling-up and accelerating our efforts to get all children access to quality education. Conversely, without solutions for families that see child labour as key to their basic survival, it will be impossible to achieve universal primary education as promised in Millennium Development Goal 2, let alone the more ambitious Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4) of ensuring inclusive and quality education for all and promoting lifelong learning.
There are many factors that push children into the workforce but it's not a coincidence that countries with the highest burden of children out-of-school – Nigeria, Pakistan and Afghanistan – also have the highest numbers of child labourers. Regionally, Sub-Saharan Africa has the largest proportion of child labourers (27% of children aged 5 to 14 years)  as well was the largest out-of-school population – 30.1 million primary school-aged children.
Poverty and marginalisation are the main drivers of child labour. Children in poor circumstances work because work is perceived as the best use of their time in contributing to the needs of the family and preparing them for the life they are expected to lead.
Poverty leads millions of children into paying jobs or – especially for young girls – domestic work that may even be unpaid, but removes the burden of feeding and housing the child. 23% of children in low-income countries were engaged in child labour in 2012, compared to 6% in upper middle-income countries. (12 - UNESCO. (2015). EFA GMR: 2015).
These key drivers of child labour – poverty, discrimination and marginalisation – are exacerbated in conflict and emergency settings. Conflict disintegrates socio-economic structure, increasing poverty level and the potential for children to be engaged in harmful work. Children, especially boys, are abducted and forcefully recruited as child soldiers. In some of the worst cases girls are forced into sex slavery as ‘wives’ for militants. Children are also sold into bonded or forced labour in the hopes that resources gained will enable other family members to survive.
More than five years of conflict in Syria has seen a dramatic increase in poverty among Syrian families and forced more children into the labour force, especially as refugees face restrictions to legal work from host country governments. In Jordan, for example, nearly half of refugee families report relying partially or completely on income generated by a child.
There has been progress. Since 2000, the number of child labourers has fallen by one third. However, in the wake of the global financial crisis, child labour may be on the rise again. Strategies to end child labour include the strengthening of legal protections for children and minorities, strengthening protections for all workers(18 - when parents are able to improve conditions and secure a fair wage, children are far less likely to have to work) and increasing access to at least a basic education including by providing economic incentives for keeping children in school. In particular, ensuring that primary education is free and compulsory and that other costs such as uniforms, books and travel are not a barrier for poor children or a disproportionate burden on poor families.
Children belong in the classroom – not working in hazardous conditions, forced to sacrifice their childhood and prospects for a better future just to keep their families alive. Prioritising education is the best way to ensure future generations of children are not condemned to childhoods of hard labour and slave-like conditions rather than being afforded the dignity and opportunity which is their due through education. Every child should be in school.

Leaving no child behind

Growing number of out of school children calls for  drastic measure to combat.


About 263 million children and youth are out of school, according to UIS data. This number includes 61 million children of primary school age (about 6 to 11 years), 60 million young adolescents of
lower secondary school age (about 12 to 14 years), and 142 million youth of upper secondary school age (about 15 to 17 years) for the school year ending in 2014.
In 2000, 54% of the 375 million out-of-school children, adolescents and youth were female. By 2014, there was virtually no difference in the global rates: 19% of girls of primary and secondary age were out of school, compared to 18% of boys. However, these global averages mask considerable differences at regional and country levels. For example, a closer look at the data shows that girls are more likely to remain excluded from education while out-of-school boys stand a greater chance of eventually entering school.

This increase in out-of-school rates with age is found in all regions to varying degrees. In Southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, at least half of all youth are not in school. In Southern Asia, youth of upper secondary age are eight times as likely to not be in school as children of primary age. To correctly interpret these figures, it is important to consider the characteristics that set this age group apart. For example, while primary and lower secondary education are compulsory in nearly all countries, the same is not true for upper secondary education. In addition, youth of upper secondary age are often of legal working age and thus have both a right to employment and a right to education.

Moreover, the indicator does not reflect the activity status or reasons why individuals in each age group fail to participate in education. To obtain a more detailed picture of their situation, it is necessary to analyse the upper secondary out-of-school rate in combination with labour market data and other sources of information. The high upper secondary out-of-school numbers are also a result of the complete lack of education among many youth. In 2005, about 75 million – or 1 out of 9 children of primary age – were out of school. These children are now in the age range of upper secondary education and many have never attended school, highlighting the urgency of achieving universal primary education. While it is important to address the needs of upper-secondary-age youth, it is essential that these efforts not divert resources from primary and lower secondary education

Friday 15 July 2016

Italy Wakes Up to Xenophobia

Killing of Nigerian refugee shows growing concern over intolerance
Emmanuel was a 36-year-old Nigerian who came to Italy last year with his wife after both their parents were killed when Boko Haram bombed their church. Emmanuel survived terrorism at home, violence in Libya, and the dangerous sea crossing to Italy. But last week he was beaten to death on the streets of Fermo, a mid-sized town in eastern Italy, in a fight that began when an Italian man called Emmanuel’s wife an “African monkey.”
Emmanuel’s senseless death and his wife’s suffering have prompted a debate about xenophobia and racism in Italy, a country with established immigrant communities that is also among the top five EU countries for asylum applications. The debate is hobbled in part by platitudes – “Italy is not a racist country” – and in part by a lack of reliable data on racist violence.
Yet Italy has a history of failing to respond adequately to hate crimes. Offensive racist language is also commonplace. Everyone in Italy remembers the terrible occasion in 2013 when then vice president of the Italian senate, Roberto Calderoli, compared Cecile Kyenge, then Italy’s first (and to date, only) black minister, to an orangutan. The lawyer defending the man who fatally attacked Emmanuel complained that parliamentarians throw around the word ‘monkey’. “Surely if these politicians used more restrained language, people without much education wouldn’t feel free to use it”, he remarked.
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi spoke out quickly after Emmanuel’s murder to condemn xenophobia, and senior members of his government joined the vice president of the European Parliament at Emmanuel’s funeral. Laura Boldrini, president of the lower house of parliament, created a committee “on intolerance, xenophobia, racism and hate” in May with representatives from all political parties plus experts and inter-governmental and civil society groups – including Human Rights Watch – to study the phenomenon and produce policy recommendations.
Consistency from Italian’s leaders is now needed to firmly and repeatedly denounce the language of intolerance and hate, to promote policies that support diversity and integration, and to make clear that racially-motivated attacks – verbal and physical – have no place in Italian society.

Wednesday 13 July 2016

Struggles to get children out of labour into schools in Bukina Faso


According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), just two-fifths of children in Burkina Faso attend school and the quality of the education they receive is variable with overcrowding and poor conditions common.
The country's Ministry of Social Action is aiming to get 80% of children working in mining back into education by opening schools next to mines, promoting enrolment and offering vocational training.
Two other young mine workers, Amy, 15, and her 14-year-old sister work close to the two young boys.
"We both come on one bike. It takes more than an hour. I pedal and when I can't do it anymore, my sister takes over," said Amy.
From about 7am, around 1000 people begin to descend into the vast crater that is their workplace - mostly  wearing rubber thongs or flimsy sandals.
Many of them are children whose hands are badly lacerated by the stone that they extract and is used in the construction of roads and houses. None wear gloves for their arduous work.
Working eight hours a day, six or seven days a week, they carry trays laden with stones on their heads which they then attempt to sell for 300 CFA Francs (50 US cents). They can expect to earn up to $2 a day.
According to the ENTE, one quarter of child labourers are engaged in dangerous work like mining.
"Do you have medication? It was the hammer..." said Nemata, a 12-year-old, whose finger had gone visibly purple following an accident.
Boureima Koumbem, a doctor and consultant at the CHU Yalgado hospital in Ouagadougou warns that aside from visible injuries, children and adults working in the granite mines are also particularly susceptible to respiratory illnesses.
"They are exposed to pneumoconiosis, their lungs are invaded by mineral dust. These are silent diseases. These people are under-oxygenated throughout their lives - sometimes without even knowing it," he said.

Friday 8 July 2016

Girls' Education can change the World

 Girls’ education can change them, their families and the world.


Girls have the same hopes and dreams as boys. They want to learn, they want to work, they want to help their families and communities.
But too often girls around the world are treated as second-class citizens. They are denied their right to education and their chance to fulfil their potential. About 63 million of them do not go to school.
In many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, the birth rate among girls with secondary education is four times lower than those with no education.

Education also enables girls and women to overcome child labour, other exploitative work and child marriage, and helps them learn how to claim their social and economic rights.
Educated girls can make informed choices - and from a far better range of options. Educating girls saves lives and builds stronger families, communities and economies.
An educated female population increases a country's productivity and fuels economic growth. Some countries lose more than $1 billion a year by failing to educate girls to the same level as boys.
An African proverb says ''the education of a girl is the education of the society".
Lets help them to make the world a better place for all.




Friday 1 July 2016

Girl and Child Education, not just the Dream.

A vicious cycle of disadvantage

Trapped in a cycle of disadvantage, children from the poorest households, in West African countries and parts of Asia , are effectively pre-selected for heightened risks of disease, hunger, illiteracy and poverty based on factors entirely outside their control. They are nearly two times as likely to die before the age of 5, and in many cases, more than twice as likely to be stunted as children from the richest households. They are also far less likely to complete school, meaning that those who survive this precarious start find little opportunity to break free from their parents’ poverty and to shape their own futures.

The lives and futures of millions of children are in jeopardy. We have a choice: Invest in the most excluded children now or risk a more divided and unfair world.

They can only wish for a better life.


Life for children out of school. We must help to change our world for the best.

Friday 24 June 2016

A child's passport to dignity

About half of schools in Syria, North east  Nigeria, Palestinian territories, Lebanon and Jordan have been disrupted by conflict. These children are then forced to stay are home or are refugees with little or no access to schools. We they continue in this vicious-cycle ? We have to stand up for them. 
More than 300 schools run by the United Nation have been attacked, damaged or rendered inoperable by armed conflict and violence in the Middle East over the past five years, disrupting the education of thousands of children, a new report says.

In Syria, more than half of schools run by UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, have ceased to function due to damage, access restrictions or the need to use the premises as shelters for displaced families.
More than 400 qualified teachers have left the country, forcing UNRWA to hire untrained teachers, the report says. Most schools have been looted of equipment and learning materials.
Altogether, almost half of UNRWA’s 700 schools in Syria, Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon and Jordan have been badly disrupted by conflict.






Friday 17 June 2016

Wednesday 15 June 2016

Osun, Students wear church garments to schools


Christian secondary school students in Osun State on Tuesday wore church garments to their schools, in a dramatic but defiant protest against the use of Hijab by female Muslim students.
Students attended Baptist High School, Adeeke in Iwo town of Osun State and Salvation Army Middle School, Alekuwodo, in the church robes.
The state chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria has been up against the state government allowing Hijab in schools.




Last week, CAN warned that Christian students in public schools will start wearing church garments to school if Governor Rauf Aregbesola goes ahead to implement a judgment by the state High Court legalizing the use of hijab by Muslim students.
A statement released Friday by CAN chairman, Elisha Ogundiya, said the decision was taken at an emergency meeting of the association’s executive committee, and heads of Churches held in Osogbo on June 7.
“Where the Osun State Government is inclined to implementing the judgment Christian students in all public schools founded by Christians with the toil and sweat of our forefathers in the faith will have no choice but to start wearing Christian garments and vestments as part of their school uniform for the propagation of our own faith given the Justice Saka Oyejide Falola declared right of Muslim Female Students to do same as what is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander as well,” the statement read.
“Adherents of other faiths who have their choice to make in this matter can wear theirs as well.”
The association appealed the court ruling, which amongst many things, it said implied that hijab was a means of propagation of Islam which it stated was a fundamental right of Muslim girls and ladies.





Thursday 9 June 2016

They have lost their homes – they must not lose their education




At the world humanitarian summit next week in Istanbul, Turkey, governments have a rare opportunity. By getting behind an initiative aimed at delivering education to some of the world’s most vulnerable children, they could make this a summit that delivers something more than vague promises and a communique that is long on words and short on action.
The initiative comes in the form of a ground-breaking financing mechanism. The education can not wait fund will be launched at the summit by the UN special envoy for education, Gordon Brown, and a group of development agencies, including Unicef, UNHCR – the UN refugee agency – and the Global Partnership for Education.


The aim is to raise $4bn-5bn (£2.7bn-3.5bn) over the next five years to reach children whose education has been disrupted by conflict and other humanitarian emergencies.
We need this initiative for a very simple reason: the current aid architecture for education in emergencies is broken beyond repair.
Consider Syria. In the space of a single primary school generation, the country has gone from education indicators comparable with those in Thailand to levels comparable with South Sudan. Six years of conflict have left some 2.6 million children out of school, either inside Syria or in the neighbouring states.
Describing the international response as inadequate does not do justice to the scale of the shortfall. UN agencies have been responding to a protracted humanitarian crisis in education through chronically under-funded annual appeals to donors. The World Bank’s lending rules have hampered the delivery of concessional finance to middle-income countries like Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. It has taken a protracted effort by the Bank’s president, Jim Yong Kim, to establish exceptional financing facilities that are delivering modest amounts – commitments to Lebanon’s refugee education strategy are $100m.
 As the international community has fiddled, the education opportunities of an entire generation of Syrian children have burned.
One symptom of the education crisis is the epidemic of child labour. Another is the flight of refugees. Recent research has identified the desperation of parents to secure education for their children as a major reason for undertaking the hazardous journey to Europe.
While the Syria crisis has been in the spotlight, other education emergencies get less attention. Today, one in three children in Central African Republic miss out on education because of violence, displacement and a shortage of teachers. Children among the forgotten refugee populations of Burundi, Eritrea and the Democratic Republic of the Congo have not only lost their homes. They have also lost the chance for an education that could enable them to rebuild their lives. Conflict in Yemen has pushed the education system into freefall.

Armed conflict is not the only problem. When disasters strike – floods in Pakistan, earthquakes in Nepal and Haiti or Ebola in west Africa, the restoration of education is often viewed as a second order priority. In 2013, less than 2% of humanitarian appeals were directed to education. Yet parents and children affected by armed conflict and other emergencies consistently view education as a priority.
Based on a proposal framed by the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), the Education Cannot Wait fund could mark a step towards changing this. For the first time, the facility would establish a pooled resource dedicated to education provision in emergencies. Operating under the auspices of the UN and the Global Partnership on Education, it could help curtail the turf wars and coordination problems that blight education.