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Kano Government To Integrate Almajiri Children Into Formal Education System

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The Kano State Government says it has concluded plans to integrate the Almajiri children, who constitute the over 40% of school children in northern Nigeria, into formal basic education.

Abdullahi Ganduje, the state governor, said this at a three-day retreat organised on Sunday, December 15, 2019, in Kaduna State, for members of the state executive council.

A group of Almajiri children struggling for alms given them by a trader in Northern Nigeria
A group of Almajiri children struggling for alms given them by a trader in Northern Nigeria

He decried the high rate of out of school children in Kano, while attributing it to an influx of children from other neighbouring states since the government’s declaration of free education.

He, however, reiterated that out of school children will continue to enjoy the free education policy of the state government from the primary to secondary school level.

‘3 Million Child Beggars ‘Almajirai’ Roam Streets Of Kano’ – Gov Gunduje

Abdullahi Ganduje, the governor of Kano State, on Thursday, April 6, 2017 observed that there are about three million out of school children, roaming the streets of the state, as Almajirai – pupils of Quranic schools converted to beggars, a statement by the state government revealed.

He noted, however, that most of such kids were found out to be from neighboring states and some countries in West Africa.

“What we discovered from our survey is that many of these Almajiris come from the Niger Republic, some from Chad, Northern Cameroon and some from other states of the north-west,” the Kano governor said pointed out.

Former President Goodluck Jonathan presents books and school materials to a street beggar at the launch of one of his Almajirai Kano
Former President Goodluck Jonathan presents books and school materials to a street beggar at the launch of one of his Almajirai schools in Northern Nigeria in 2014

Speaking during the Kaduna state Economic and Investment Summit, Governor Ganduje said a recent survey carried out in the state established the number of the Almajirai, saying this has now become a social and economic problem.

“So, if we can come together and have a common synergy to introduce a common legislation, preventing the movement of school age children from one place to another, I think the states will find it very easy to address the problem of Almajiri syndrome”, he emphasized.

Stressing that the Almajiri syndrome is one of the serious problems worrying the North-west geopolitical zone, he said it was imperative for the seven states of the sub-region to identify the economic advantages they can use to move forward and tackle their common social problems.

He said: “These seven states should try, identify the economic advantages that we can lay our hands on as to move this region forward. And what are the social problems that we are having?

“This is the first time, since the inception of this democracy in 1999, where the seven governors (of the north-west zone) decided to come together to form a forum. We even went to the extent of employing a consultant who is giving us the green light on various issues on economic development.

“Let me start with the position of the North-west in Nigeria. We are the most populous geopolitical zone, constituting 25 percent of the population of Nigeria. With regards to land mass, we have 23 percent of the land mass in Nigeria. What we require now is the political will to come together and be fully integrated – socio-economic integration beyond paper integration, an integration that will bring development in terms of institutions and in terms of programmes that will improve the quality of lives of our people”, Dr. Ganduje asserted.

“It will be very important to have an integration commission which looks into the development capacity of our institutions, because whatever we want to do, if our institutions are not developed, then whatever we do may not be actualized”, he maintained, highlighting the need to have a data bank that would contain demographic and economic facts from all the Northern states, for ease of planning and investment.

According to him, “another issue is that we are individually conducting our educational programmes, if we come together to see how we can have different programmes in our university curriculum, it will help us specialized and we can even build universities that will specialize in the various programmes, thereby saving energy and resources for the development of our region”.

“The potentials of the north-west are very obvious. The north-west has the highest water density in the whole of West Africa. The amount of water is such that they can feed the whole of West Africa and this is something that needs to be tapped”, the governor hinted.

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