Parents who refuse to send their children to school may face trial, says Federal Government

Parents who refuse to send their children to school may face trial, says Federal Government

by Joseph Anthony
103 views
Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu

The Federal Government has said work is ongoing to criminalise parents who refuse to send their children to school, adding that such parents may also be prosecuted.


The Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, stated this in Abuja on Monday during a press conference on the Federal Governmentโ€™s intervention in the basic education sub-sector.

The Federal Governmentโ€™s intervention, he said, had hit N350bn in the last four years.

Adamu said the ministry had demanded the criminalisation of the act of not sending children to school as well as the possible prosecution of such parents.

The minister said although the responsibility for basic education belonged to the state and local governments, the Federal Government through the Universal Basic Education Commission had provided matching grants and other interventions to the 36 states to empower the basic education sub-sector.


Adamu said, โ€œThe ministry is calling not just for the criminalisation of this act, because something is already being done on that, but for putting the law into effect. The Sokoto State Governor, (Aminu Tambuwal) once did something like this. Unless not sending children to school is made a crime, and parents who refuse to send their children to school are prosecuted, we may not see the desired changes.

โ€œI agree that not sending children to school should be criminalised and it will be done. In the last four years, the Federal Governmentโ€™s funding of basic education has increased significantly, despite low earnings from oil prices.  In 2015, matching and non-conditional grants disbursements to 15 states amounted to N68bn.

โ€œIn 2016, grants disbursements to 29 states and the Federal Capital Territory was about N77bn and in 2017, it was N95bn to 24 states. Hence, the disbursements over the four-year period totalled N350bn.โ€


The minister added that the refusal of some states to provide their counterpart fund so as to access the UBEC fund forced the Federal Government to deduct the money from their allocations so that the education sector would not suffer.

Adamu said, โ€œCorruption and lack of political will have been responsible for most statesโ€™ inability to provide their counterpart fund to enable them to access the matching grant provided by the Federal Government.

โ€œThe Federal Government therefore decided to deduct from source, which is from the last tranche of the Paris Club refund to states that have not been able to access their money from UBEC.โ€

You may also like

Leave a Comment

Chijos News is an independent online publication that provides readers with the latest breaking Nigerian news, world news, entertainment, sports, business, and many more.

@2024 – Chijosnews.com. All Rights Reserved.

-
00:00
00:00
Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00