By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu
When Olusegun Obasanjo took over in the middle of 1976 from the slain Murtala Muhammed as Nigeria’s military Head of State, the regime was already committed as a matter policy to transition power to an elected civilian administration in 1979. This was a big deal alright but not one over which he had much say as such.
As military Head of State, General Obasanjo identified two issues to define his personal legacy. One was food security. To address that, he launched “Operation Feed the Nation”, better known by the acronym (OFN). Those were the same initials of Obasanjo Farms Nigeria, the name of the company under which the General would later pursue his post-retirement vocation in agriculture. The coincidence was not lost on many.
The
other issue was education. To pursue this, General Obasanjo launched the
Universal Primary Education (UPE) in 1976. 40 years later, an independent study
determined that the UPE had “a statistically significant impact on schooling
attainment of beneficiaries” but there were questions as to its reach and
coverage.
Quite
apart from the usual dysfunctions associated with centrally dictated government
programmes, the UPE also faced opposition from traditional and religious
leaders in some parts of Nigeria, who reportedly felt “that it is a Christian
brainwashing which alienates their children from their own religious beliefs.”
Those were also people who largely opposed the education of the girl-child.
The
three and a half years of the Obasanjo military regime were too short for such
an ambitious programme as the UPE to prove itself. The best he could hope for
was that his civilian successors would continue with the idea.
At the launch of the UPE, the
country was in the middle of what its rulers believed would be an interminable
Oil Boom. In hindsight, the onset of the UPE coincided with the beginning of a
bust. The programme became one of the casualties of the rampant corruption and
the subsequent austerity that bedevilled the administration of Obasanjo’s
chosen successor, President Shehu Shagari.
The
military regime that toppled Shehu Shagari four years later paid no heed to
basic education. Chronically careening from the twin crises of balance of
payments and elite banditry of the Nigerian political class, the system never
quite rediscovered the will to invest in basic education as a duty of the
Nigerian state. By the time Obasanjo returned as civilian president 20 years
after his first tour of duty, the country had begun to reap whirlwind from
decades of costly omission.
President
Obasanjo appeared to understand this but arguably waited too long to address
it. In the fifth year of his eight-year tenure, he enacted the Universal Basic
Education Programme (UBE), which made basic education compulsory for all
children in Nigeria. Basic education under the law was defined as nine years of
formal education – six years in primary school and three years of junior
secondary education. It also became a federal crime to deny a child in Nigeria
access to such education. To encourage uptake by the states, the Federal
Government offered generous co-financing incentives to the states. Many failed
to take it up.
Two
years later, in 2006, President Obasanjo launched a National Policy on
Education. By this time, a diagnosis had indicated the depth of the emergency.
Of 42.1 million Nigerian children eligible for primary education at the end of
2005, “only 22.3m were in the primary schools. This figure implies that about
19.8m or 47 per cent Nigerian children that should (have) been in primary
schools (were) not.”
It
is no surprise that this period coincided with the onset of what would later
become an Islamist insurgency founded on an ideology opposed to Western
education.
As with his first tour of
presidential duty, the policy measures implemented by President Obasanjo on his
second coming equally relied for their durability on his successors sharing his
sense of mission and urgency. It was a tall hope. In the two decades since
Obasanjo’s National Policy on Education of 2006, successive administrations
neglected it to a point where the country has become the most natural
recruiting ground in the world for radicalisation.
On
Monday, November 13, 2017, Muhammadu Buhari, another Nigerian ruler on his
second tour of presidential duty, hosted a Cabinet retreat on education.
Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, himself a teacher of considerable stature and
Education Minister, Adamu Adamu, also addressed the retreat which, however,
involved little deliberation and ended with an inconclusive communique.
A
high point of the Buhari Cabinet retreat was the presentation of Minister Adamu
Adamu’s “Education for Change: A Ministerial Strategic Plan, 2016-2019.”
Launched in August 2016 and better known under the acronym MSP, its title was a
play upon the “Change” mantra of the then government, and the United Nations’
Education for All campaign. If it had been launched today, the plan would
probably have been called “Education for Renewed Hope.”
At over 120 pages, most Nigerians,
including senior staff of the Federal Ministry of Education (FMoE), were
unlikely ever to read the MSP. In his foreword, Minister Adamu promised to
“welcome rigorous discussion with all levels of stakeholders to ensure a
sustainable and enduring document.” It never happened.
The
MSP offered the government’s vision for education in Nigeria, setting out three
strategic outcomes namely: improving access, enhancing quality, and
strengthening sectoral systems. The scope covered ten major areas. Under
access, in particular, the MSP focused on out-of-school children (OOSC).
The MSP identified a priority in the
twin challenges of OOSC and mass illiteracy. The plan estimated the number of
OOSC at 10.5 million and illiteracy at 38 per cent or 60 million Nigerians.
With reference to OOSC, it proposed “a state of emergency on education in the
states most affected by the (Boko Haram) insurgency.” This was an implicit
recognition of the relationship of cause and effect between policy failure and
national security consequence.
By
2019, the plan hoped to reduce by half the number of illiterate people in
Nigeria through the deployment of 170,000 instructors, 100,000 of whom will be
mobilised by the Federal Government and another 70,000 by the states. For the
first time, the MSP offered a plan for a pre-primary (nursery) education
curriculum. Not much has been heard of these since then.
The
pivotal planning data on which the MSP was anchored was dubious and dated. On
the issue of OOSC, for instance, it claimed that Nigeria had “10.5 million
out-of-school children”, a figure first used by the FMoE in its planning in 2006.
Contradicting the MSP, however, President Buhari informed the country at the
retreat that in Nigeria “an estimated 13.2 million children are out of school.”
This was one-third more than the estimate by the MSP.
On
the back of this frightening number, President Buhari then touted the goal of
the FMoE as “fostering the development of all Nigerian citizens to their full
potentials, in the promotion of a strong, democratic, egalitarian, indivisible
and indissoluble sovereign nation under God.”
For
all its ambition, the MSP was starkly un-costed. Instead, it proposed to
increase already bloated education overheads by elevating the National Board
for Arabic and Islamic Studies (NBAIS) to a parastatal. It is hardly any
surprise that President Buhari’s goal of enlightened governance based on
egalitarian civics came to naught.
These and many more flaws in the MSP
highlight the reasons why Nigeria’s educational sector drifted into a zone of
dangerous incoherence under President Buhari’s watch. In the period since then,
the country has descended into a snarling cauldron of inter-ethnic hate.
This
past week, President Obasanjo disclosed that the population of OOSC in Nigeria
has nearly doubled to 24 million, which is over 10 per cent of the country’s
current population estimate. He predictably warned: “You don’t need an oracle
to know they will become the recruiting ground for the Boko Haram of tomorrow.”
Education
should be a national security priority for all levels of government. States
need both a coherent policy environment and a committed partner at the federal
level. Yet very few Nigerians can say who the Minister of Education is, what is
his or her name and what is their plan for addressing Nigeria’s 24 million
reasons to fear the future.
*Odinkalu, a lawyer and teacher can be reached at chidi.odinkalu@tufts.edu
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