OPINION: Leaving no child behind in Kwara. By Rafiu Ajakaye

Date: 2020-03-01

Foundation is everything. Once anything lacks a solid foundation, it is a matter of time before it comes crashing down. Kwara has started the process to give its primary school children one nutritious meal per day, keying into a programme designed by the Federal Government to tackle a number of issues. At the moment, 34 states and the Federal Capital Territory are enrolled in what is called the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme (NHGSFP). Only Bayelsa and Kwara are left. Abuja said the programme, launched in 2016, is meant to boost nutrition among school age children, drive up dwindling school enrolment, and help the poor, among other things.

Two weeks ago, Kwara Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq officially flagged off the process that would lead to about 220,632 primary school children across 1,578 public schools having one balanced meal a day. While the step has jerked up his positive ratings in the state, a few individuals - mostly from the middle class - have questioned the need for feeding school children when the state lacks basic infrastructure, including good schools. They have also questioned whether it is sustainable or necessary at this time. To be fair, these critics come under two umbrellas: those who truly do not understand the underlying issues and those who are just not convinced that government should ever do that.

It is better to assume that the first category are in the majority, hence the need to properly explain the apocalyptic foundational issues we face as a state. Kwara *Leaving no child behind in Kwara* By Rafiu Ajakaye

Foundation is everything. Once anything lacks a solid foundation, it is a matter of time before it comes crashing down. Kwara has started the process to give its primary school children one nutritious meal per day, keying into a programme designed by the Federal Government to tackle a number of issues. At the moment, 34 states and the Federal Capital Territory are enrolled in what is called the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme (NHGSFP). Only Bayelsa and Kwara are left. Abuja said the programme, launched in 2016, is meant to boost nutrition among school age children, drive up dwindling school enrolment, and help the poor, among other things.

Two weeks ago, Kwara Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq officially flagged off the process that would lead to about 220,632 primary school children across 1,578 public schools having one balanced meal a day. While the step has jerked up his positive ratings in the state, a few individuals - mostly from the middle class - have questioned the need for feeding school children when the state lacks basic infrastructure, including good schools. They have also questioned whether it is sustainable or necessary at this time. To be fair, these critics come under two umbrellas: those who truly do not understand the underlying issues and those who are just not convinced that government should ever do that.

It is better to assume that the first category are in the majority, hence the need to properly explain the apocalyptic foundational issues we face as a state. Kwara leads the north central in school age malnutrition, with 33 percent of its children stunted and another 7 percent wasted. The picture can’t be grimmer! That means 40 percent of our children are already technically out of the race before it begins.

As at 2019, the UNICEF said 5 in 10 Nigerian children under five are malnourished (stunted, wasted or overweight); while 3 in 10 children aged 6 to 23 months live on poor diets. Experts have linked this phenomenon to various factors, including illiteracy, widening economic inequality, and underage mother syndrome.

The school feeding had therefore been conceived to address three serious issues: malnutrition, rising rate of out of school children, and worsening economic inequality which has devastating consequences for societal cohesion.

The NHGSFP, which Kwara is replicating, is designed to deliver one nutritious meal per day to every school child, thereby helping to provide the most basic nutrients they need for brain and physical development. Some persons have suggested to the government to invest the money for school feeding in infrastructural development. We beg to disagree. While government must indeed ensure decent academic environment, it must be more conscious of 'learning outcomes' which are the basis for enrolling children in school. What is the point in enrolling a malnourished child in a good school when he is clearly unable to learn anything?

School feeding revs up enrollment which has domino effects. While more enrollment reduces the level of illiteracy, it has wider implications for the society especially girl child education. Educated women, because of knowledge, enlightenment and higher income, are less prone to maternal malnutrition or maternal death and are more likely to raise healthy, educated and prosperous children which in turn affects societal growth. While school feeding helps to fight malnutrition among school children, the initiators have something bigger in mind. That includes gradually raising a generation of healthy and well educated children and brightening the future of the country. Experts say bright and better educated children are many times more likely to land good jobs and reduce poverty rate. At the same time, such children constitute the critical mass which Nigeria badly needs.

By all means Nigeria must pursue inclusive growth. Berating the widening inequality in Nigeria, International development body Oxfam said in a recent report: "Nigeria is not a poor country yet millions are living in hunger. The government must work with the international community to get food and aid to hungry people now. But it can't stop there. It must free millions of Nigerians from poverty by building a new political and economic system that works for everyone, not just a fortunate few."

The above sums up why the country, with 112 million people living below the poverty line, must redistribute wealth to rein in extreme hunger, destitution, and social unrest. AbdulRazaq's school feeding, a component of the four-part social investment programme, can't be more timely. With 220,632 school children spread across 192 electoral wards, the government will engage thousands of food vendors, hundreds of small holder farmers and retailers to take part in the school feeding programme. The value chain is better imagined, clearly taking hundreds of thousands out of extreme poverty.

That said, AbdulRazaq's school feeding is not a stand-alone initiative. It is coming on the heels of massive rehabilitation of schools across the state and proposed training and retraining of teachers which is covered in the 2020 budget. While the government does not claim to be perfect, it is clear that its approach to education development is sure-footed and all-encompassing, even if gradual and constrained by funds.

Rafiu Ajakaye is the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor of Kwara State.

 


Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Ayegbeni     Bayer AG     Jani Ibrahim     Idowu Laro     Olatunji Bamgbola     Code Of Conduct Bureau     Aliyu Kora Sabi     Neuropsychiatric Hospital     Oniwa     Alfa Modibo Belgore     Jumoke Gafar     Alanamu     Tanke Flyover Bridge     Baruten     Is\'haq Modibbo Kawu     Mazars Consulting     Ahmed Ayinla Jimoh     Oloye     Ekiti     IEDPU     Tuesday Assayomo     Oladimeji Thompson     Mufutau Gbadamosi Esuwoye     IYA ALFA NLA     Tafidan Kaiama     Olomu Of Omu-Aran     Esuwoye     Galland Marcias     Haliru Dantoro     Dogara     ANCOPPS     Dairo Kunle Paul     Balogun-Ojomu     Kwara State Fish Farmers Association     NULGE     Muslim Stakeholders Of Kwara State     Okin Malt     Saadatu Modibbo-Kawu     Women Radio     Isau     Offa Descendants Union     Idofin     Isaac Gbenle     Ademola Kiyesola     Samuel Elizabeth Keatswa     Oba Abdulraheem     Afusat Nike Ibrahim     Ubandawaki     LEAH Charity Foundation     Afonja Descendants Union     Abatemi-Usman     Aiyedun     Abdulwahab Olarewaju Issa     Kisira     Wale Oladepo     Oniyangi Kunle Sulaiman     International Vocational Centre     Ahmad Fatima Bisola     Adebayo Salami     Innocent Okoye     Abdulrauf Yusuf     Abdulrazaq Sanni     Raliat Islamic Foundation     Oyeyemi Olasumbo Florence     Kwara Coalition Of Business And Professional Associations     Yakub Lai Gobir     John Mayokun Dada     KwaraLearn     KWASSIP     Olaitan Adefila     Eleyele     Taofeek Sanusi     Aliyu Muhammad Saifudeen     Mufutau Olatinwo     Bola Sagaya     Yusuf Amuda Gobir     Najim Yaasin    

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Sherif Sagaya     Oke-Oyi     Al-Ilory     Adamu Jemilat-Baki     Borgu     Lawyers Unite Against Corruption     Mutawali     Ophthalmological Society Of Nigeria     Offa Descendants Union     Muyideen Ajani Bello     Baba Isale     Taofik Abdulkareem     Oko     Abdulkadir Bolakale Sakariyah     Voices Of Tomorrow     Adeniyi Ojo     Vasolar Consortium     New Nigeria People’s Party     Jaiz Bank     Abdullahi Saadudeen Alikinla     Saliu Tunde Bello     Lawal Arinola Kudirat     Memunat Monsuma     Aliyu Alhassan     Hassanat Bello     Amada Jidda     Amosa     Ilorin     Earlyon Technologies     Mary Kemi Adeosun     Bolaji Abdullahi     Muritala Awodun     Kola Ologbondiyan     Alfa Belgore     State Bureau Of Internal Revenue     Olatunji Moronfoye     Adedipe     NIPR     Yahaya Abdulkareem Babaita     Mahmud Durosinlohun Atiku     Hajj     Ohoro Of Shao     Aishat Sulu-Gambari     Usman Yunusa     Salihu S. Yaru     Wahab Issa     Towobola Abdulrahman Toyin     Oba Sulaiman Asude     Garuba Alikinla Shittu     Abdulrauf Aliyu     The Herald     Amuda Musbau     Government Girls’ Day Secondary School Pakata     ASMAU PLAZA     Yahaya Oloriegbe     Wasiu Odewale     Fatai Adeniyi Garba     Belgore     Isiaq Khadeejah     Funke Adedoyin     Fulani     Ubandoma Of Ilorin     Abdulwasiu Bolaji Adeyi     Omoniyi M. Ayinla     Oyun     Kaosarah Adeyi     Soffiyyallah Kamaldeen     David Oyerinola Adedunmoye     Neuropsychiatric Hospital     Halimah Perogi     Abdulrahman Iliasu     Gani Saadu     Bello Oyedepo     Ajayi Okasanmi     Abdul-Rasheed Na\'Allah     Umar Saro     Kunbi Titiloye