October 16, 2014 by Success Nwogu
Scores
of Christians peacefully protested in Kwara State on Wednesday over the
reported plan by the state government to take over Christian schools in
the State.
Schools in the state resumed on
Wednesday but some clerics, church leaders and other Christians gathered
at the missionary schools on protest.
They carried placards with different
inscriptions, asking the state government to hand over the schools to
them. Some of the placards read, “We want our schools back,” “We are
taking our schools. They belong to us.” “Govt should stop grant-aiding
our schools. We can run them on our own.”
The peaceful protest, our correspondent
reports, did not disturb academic activities in the schools as pupils
and students had unhindered access to their schools.
Our correspondent observed same scenario
of protesting Christian leaders at St. James Christ Apostolic Church
Secondary School, New Yidi Road, Ilorin; St. Barnabas Primary and
Secondary Schools, Ilorin; St. John Secondary and Primary School,
Maraba, Ilorin and St. Anthony Secondary School, Ilorin.
There were also protests in schools owned by the Cherubim and Seraphim, Catholic Church, ECWA and Methodist..
Kwara State Governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah
Ahmed, however told journalists that the government was ready to return
missionary schools to the owners but that due process must be followed.
He said the government had already sent a bill to the state House of
Assembly to either amend or repeal the 2006 Education Law in the state.
Ahmed said, “There are two types of
schools; the first one is government-owned and the second one is
privately owned but government grant-aided some schools. The
government-owned are straight-jacketed; the grant-aided ones have
entered into agreement with the government under Kwara State Education
Law on how grant-aided schools are supposed to be run.
“Once you build a school, either a
faith-based, community-based, owned by individuals or groups and you
desire to seek for grant-aiding by government, then you would be run
under the Kwara State Education Law on grant-aiding of schools. And
those schools give the proprietors limited power and give government
limited power. This is how schools have been run so far.
“As a matter of fact, it is premised on
this that government says, ‘ok, since there are desires by certain
individuals and groups to take back their schools, government is also
willing to give back their schools to them.”
During the protest, Chairman, Ilorin
District Church Council of Christ Apostolic Church Council, Pastor Peter
Ogunwale, said they were against the alleged attempt by the Ahmed-led
administration to either fully take over the schools or continue the
control of the schools.
He said Ahmed had asked churches to write to the government if they wanted to take back their schools.
Ogunwale said, “We want our schools
back, we are not selling them. We are the owners of the schools; they
are duly registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission in Abuja by
us, and we have all the papers.
“We are not fighting them, but the issue
is that they have destroyed our schools. They destroy it every day even
up till this morning. If you go in there, you will be surprised at the
terrible level of destruction. So, we want to have them back. We don’t
want the government to grant aid to us again, because that is why they
are claiming ownership of the schools.
“We are also aware of plan to build
mosques inside our schools. We won’t allow that; we want our children to
be taught in the ways of the Lord so that when they grow older, they
won’t depart from it.”
Copyright PUNCH.
No comments:
Post a Comment