Connect with us

National Issues

Nigeria’s Twenty Million Heartache -By Kene Obiezu

 Nigeria is far from an easy place to be a child. Those tender, innocent and vulnerable years are better lived elsewhere than in the Giant of Africa where shocking conditions often make for a notoriously difficult environment for children.

Published

on

Nigeria flag

  If there is anything those who are into the development of countries are convinced about, it is that no society can truly and properly develop without putting children, often its youngest demographic, at the center of any development. This has so often proven an irreducible requirement in the building of strong and sustainable countries.

 For Nigeria, development has been a real struggle. The country`s independence came in 1960 and it did not come too soon as it was at about the same time that many other African countries who were under the iron fists of colonialists on the continent found independence too.

 For Nigeria, the road has been a rough one. A slew of brutally disruptive military coups long put to paid any hopes the Giant of Africa had that it would have an easy ride.  Democracy did return in 1999, but every other day, Nigeria`s painful struggles as a country begs the question whether the country was not irreparably damaged during those heady days.

Advertisement

 Canes for children

 Nigeria is far from an easy place to be a child. Those tender, innocent and vulnerable years are better lived elsewhere than in the Giant of Africa where shocking conditions often make for a notoriously difficult environment for children.

In Nigeria, it is a common refrain that ‘children are the leaders of tomorrow’. Whatever that means has never conduced to clarity. The emptiness of what has become a mantra for the mendacious is highlighted by the fact that many of those who as children were told ad nauseam that they are leaders of tomorrow have long come of age and grown old without ever seeing it come to fruition.

Advertisement

 The poverty which grinds through Nigeria disproportionately affects children.  Conflicts and insecurity strip children of many forms of insecurity with every day bringing with it even more challenges for children in Nigeria.

 A bleak future

 To compound the present predicament of Nigerian children is the fact that the future is looking bleak for the millions of children who are currently out of school.

Advertisement

 The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation(UNESCO) recently revealed that according to the latest global data on out-of-school children, Nigeria has about 20 million of them.

  According to the organization, the new and improved methodology used to arrive at the figures revealed that worldwide, 244 million children and youth between the ages of 6 and 18 worldwide were out of school.

 For decades, figures between 10.5 million and 15 million were bandied about as the number of out-of-school children in Nigeria. The sharp spike in the number of has been put down to the Nigeria`s degenerating security situation.

Advertisement

 The report by the UNESCO Institute for Statistics(UIS) and Global Education Monitoring(GEM0 also showed that sub-Saharan Africa remains the region which has the highest number of children and youth that are out of school.98 million children and young people are excluded from education in the region.

 These new figures are without doubt beyond alarming.  There is an inexorable link between education and poverty. They are joined together in a vicious cycle, consequently feeding off each other.

 With the terrorists stalking Nigeria finding ample time and opportunities to haunt Nigerian schools and students, there is no doubt that if the situation is not checked, these numbers will continue to rise with the passage of time.

Advertisement

To get children enroll in school and stay in school requires painfully deliberate efforts. There is no other way.

Kene Obiezu,

Twitter: @kenobiezu

Advertisement

Opinion Nigeria is a practical online community where both local and international authors through their opinion pieces, address today’s topical issues. In Opinion Nigeria, we believe in the right to freedom of opinion and expression. We believe that people should be free to express their opinion without interference from anyone especially the government.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Comments

Trending Articles