The Borno
Government said on Monday that it would re-open public secondary schools next
week, two years after they were closed due to Boko Haram insurgency.
The
state’s Commissioner for Education, Inuwa Kubo, told the News Agency of Nigeria
(NAN) in Maiduguri that Internally Displayed Persons (IDPs) occupying the
schools had been relocated to allow for resumption of academic activities.
Mr. Kubo
said that repairs had been carried out on all the structures in the schools to
provide atmosphere, conducive for teaching and learning.
“I wish to
announce that on Sept. 26, all public schools are going to be re-opened.
“I want to
state that government has repaired all the structures damaged by the IDPs in
the schools, to ensure comfort for the returning students.
“Parents
and guardians should please make sure that they send their children back to
school,” he said.
Mr. Kubo
decried the prolonged closure of the schools and the fact that proprietors of
private schools took undue advantage of the development to charge arbitrary
fees.
“We
understand that some of them have taken undue advantage of the closure to hike
school fees; we will not allow the situation to continue.
“We are
going to visit the schools to find out how much they are charging and how much
they are paying their teachers,” he said.
The
schools were shut in March, 2014, after terrorists attacked a school in
neighbouring Yobe.
The
government reopened primary schools in 2015 but could not do the same with the
secondary schools because they had been taken over by IDPs. (NAN)
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