Kagara in pictures: Terrible state of govt school where students were kidnapped, Nigerians react

Kagara in pictures: Terrible state of govt school where students were kidnapped, Nigerians react

- After years of suffering institutional neglect, attention has been called to the sorry state of the Kagara Government College

- Shehu Sani, a former Kaduna lawmaker, urged the Niger state government to build a perimeter fence for the school

- Sani decried that public schools have now become the "sitting ducks for bandits and terrorists"

PAY ATTENTION: Join Legit.ng Telegram channel! Never miss important updates!

Shehu Sani, a former lawmaker representing Kaduna Central, has called the attention of the Niger state government to the terrible case of the Government Science College, Kagara Niger state.

In a picture-tweet on Thursday sighted by Legit.ng, the former lawmaker, writer and social critic, said the "absence of perimeter fence made it easier" for the abductors to perpetuate the abduction.

Kagara darted into the spotlight after suspected bandits on Tuesday, February 16, stormed the government college, shot sporadically, with one student feared killed and several others including the teachers abducted.

Read also

Kagara abduction: Babangida's daughter identifies 4 causes and solutions to kidnapping

Kagara in pictures: Inside terrible state of govt school where students were kidnapped; Nigerians reacts
The sorry state of Kagara government science college which produced two leaders for Nigeria. Credit: @ShehuSani
Source: Twitter

The abduction is coming months after a similar plot played out in Katsina state where schoolboys were abducted in Kankara local government.

Sani called on Governor Abubakar Sani Bello of Niger to rebuild GSC after a decade of utter neglect by the government.

According to him, the school has become a "sitting ducks for bandits and terrorists."

The former lawmaker said in an emotional tweet:

"Dear Governor Bello, sometimes it takes tragedy for things to change. Use this opportunity to rebuild GSC Kagara, after decades of utter neglect. Absence of a perimeter fence made it easier for the Kidnappers.
"Public schools must not be sitting ducks for bandits and terrorists."

Nigerians react

Rich Efe stated:

"This is a state that has produced 2 former heads of State. Ayam just tired for this country. It's all about them, never the people."

Idris Salanke also commented:

"Yeah indeed it's not only GSS Kagara was at the vast of total obsolescence if might get it right it's all must 85% of the government school in the state are facing such situation, A like there was no government to over looks things getting out of hand."

Read also

Stop wasting your time calling for state creation, Shehu Sani tells Igbo leaders

Abubakar Nasir wrote:

"Can you imagine a school where boys are turn to men, zeros to heros, grass to grace and hopeless to hopeful. Which kind of country are we having..Please government this negligence on the educational sector is too much."

Been Saeed wrote:

"Is it all about the government? This school must have produced notable members in the today's society that the bill required for its rehabilitation will cost them nothing why won't they make the environment suitable for others as it was for them?"

PAY ATTENTION: Install our latest app for Android, read the best news on Nigeria’s #1 news

Meanwhile, Aisha Babangida, daughter of the former military head of state and prominent statesman Ibrahim Babangida, has urged the federal government to "reevaluate the root causes of kidnapping and address them."

Reacting to the abduction of college students in Kagara by suspected bandits in a post on her Instagram page on Thursday, February 18, Babangida said she shared the pain of the victims.

Read also

Herdsmen crisis: Anxiety as Ogun govt meets communities attacked by herders, sets up security task force

****

Rahaman Abiola is a result-oriented journalist and content writer with a firm grip of over 5-year corporate experience stranding diverse roles in digital & traditional media and social media communication.

A published literary writer, freelancer and public commentator, he has written over 100 essays covering diverse issues on economy, politics and current affairs, entertainment and leadership published in virtually all notable Nigerian national dailies and digital media in Nigeria.

He is a graduate of English Literature, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. Follow him on Twitter via @ShugabanR.

Source: Legit.ng

Online view pixel