Despite
criticisms from several quarters on the education policies of Governor
Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State, Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade has
described it as reminiscent of the education reforms of late Chief
Obafemi Awolowo, during the First Republic.
Making
the observations at the public assessment forum tagged Gbangba Dekun in
Ile-Ife, Ooni, who was represented at the gathering by Obalufe of
Iremoland, Chief Folorunsho Omishakin, said one striking resemblance
between Awolowo’s education reform and Aregbesola’s current education
reform is that both were antagonised.
A
question and answer session, Gbangba Dekun is a platform provided by
government for people to meet their leaders and office holders to openly
assess the performance of the government on its programmes and
policies.
According
to the monarch, in 1955 when Awolowo started his education reforms in
the then Western Region, people antagonised him but the late sage
remained undaunted in his commitment to turning around the region’s
education fortune.
The
monarch noted that Awolowo’s reform succeeded at last because of his
tenacity of purpose and selfless conviction for the future of the
region.
Ooni
lamented that a few people had failed to see beyond the immediate to
see the overall benefit of the school reform process blaming those
antagonizing the plans as mixing pure development issues in the
education sector with politics and religion.
He
therefore commended the bold step of the governor in tackling the rot
in this all-important sector, advising him not to be distracted by what
some people are doing or saying about the reforms.
“Your
programme too will succeed like that of Obafemi Awolowo. When Awolowo
started the reform, people antagonised him. They said the programme
would not succeed.
“But
before our very eyes, Awo’s education programme succeeded. We still can
see many of the products of that reform till today. “If other regions
had followed what he did in education sector in the then Western region,
may be today there won’t be Boko Haram up North or militants in the
Niger Delta. Or at worst, what we would have today are educated
militants and Boko Haram members.
“So,
like Awo, don’t be discouraged by antagonisms and criticisms of few
people. Remain focused on your reform programme and you will succeed,”
Ooni said.
He
also advised the government on accountability through effective
monitoring by school inspectors, attributing the collapse of previous
education system to the sudden disappearance of old school inspectorate
system.
0 comments:
Post a Comment