The British charity, IA-Foundation, has urged Nigeria’s President-elect Sen. Bola Tinubu to take urgent steps to tackle Nigeria’s out-of-school crisis, to restore hope to some 20.2 million out-of-school kids in the country.
The founder and Chief Executive Officer of IA-Foundation, Mrs. Ibironke Adeagbo, appealed in a letter to the president-elect, in Abuja on Wednesday.
Adeagbo’s letter comes ahead of a fund-raising event, slated for Kent in England on March 18, to bring global attention to the out-of-school problem in Nigeria.
The event is billed to take place at Bishop Justus CE School in Bromley, Kent, east of England.
It is expected to attract dignitaries, including Nigeria’s top UK envoy, Amb. Sarafa Ishola and a former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
IA-Foundation, which is active in Nigeria is a British-registered charity, working assiduously for the past four years to tackle the out-of-school crisis in Africa’s most populous nation.
Adeagbo advised the incoming administration to hit the ground running in tackling basic problems that had made millions of Nigerian children stay out of school.
She said that government should increase budgetary allocation to the education sector, improve infrastructure and train teachers to turn around basic education in the country.
According to her, although basic education is believed to be free in Nigeria, the entry barriers of registration fees and other payments required before enrollment have made many indigent families keep their children at home.
“In 2022, we identified over 400 children in the Bwari community in Abuja, whose parents could not afford to pay entrance fees of N7,000 to N8,000, to be enrolled into government primary and secondary schools.
“For children in this category, they want to get an education but it is expensive for their families,” the UK-based Nigerian, a chartered accountant recounted.
Adeagbo also pleaded with the president-elect to partner with civil society and development agencies to accelerate development in the West African country.
“As a foundation, we will continue to remain committed to our vision of ensuring that we reduce the number of children without education in Nigeria,’’ she stated.
Adeagbo re-stated that IA-Foundation had been able to put over 100 children back to school in nine states in the country, including Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ekiti, Delta, Nasarawa, Kwara, and the Federal Capital Territory.
“We have also donated more than 3,000 learning resources to ensure that no child drops out of school, due to a lack of learning materials.’’
Adeagbo said: “we are not satisfied yet because although what we have done is significant in terms of impact but it’s a drop in the ocean with 20.2 million children out of school.
“That is why this year, we are organizing our annual fund-raising and charity event, tagged `Securing the Future, to mobilize resources in the UK to cater to the needs of children in Nigeria.’’