Kebbi has closed seven schools considered unsafe following the recent abduction of students and teachers of Federal Government College(FGC) Birnin Yauri by bandits.
Chairman Kebbi chapter of the National Union of Teachers (NUT), Isah Arzika stated this.
According to Arzika the shut schools are in vulnerable areas of the state believed to be soft targets of bandits.
He noted that the move was a proactive measure to further prevent recurrence of FGC, Birnin Yauri’s incident.
Arzika said the state government had directed all principals to close any school considered not safe.
“Police and vigilante groups had since been deployed for monitoring and protection of schools,” he added.
He said all the proactive measures involved all stakeholders critical to safety of school environment.
“This is because principals are teachers, all the Directors at the Board are also teachers. It is the decision that we all took that is affecting us,” he stated.
He added: “Government has given us an order and option to take any necessary action as far as our schools are concerned. That we can close those schools which we think are not safe and prone to attacks in the areas close to the forest.
“I am not talking about only boarding schools, any school that is on the frontline areas and not safe, we would just ask the students to pack and go home, pending the time the situation normalises.”
On the recent abduction at FGC Birnin Yauri, Arzika said the bandits have contacted parents and families of the students but no ransom has been demanded.
The NUT boss said: “They collected the contacts of parents and teachers from the abductees and thereafter made calls to tell them that their children and people were with them but none of them asked for a kobo, they only said they wanted to establish contact that the abductees are in their custody.
“Right now, two of our teachers have regained their freedom. Seven schools in that area have been closed and more will be closed if we realise the situation continues to be unsafe for the teachers and students.”
The Nation