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Some parents in Bwari Area Council, FCT, have decried the incessant strikeby the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) and described it as an unhealthy situation for the children.
The parents told the newsmen in separate interviews on Wednesday in Abuja that the ongoing strike by the union was killing the education sector.
Supreme News reports that FCT NUT had on Monday directed its members across the six area councils to embark on an indefinite industrial action.
The union gave the directive in a communiqué issued at the end of its emergency State Wing Executive Council (SWEC) meeting held in Gwagwalada.
The communiqué jointlysigned by the NUT state chairman, Mr. Stephen Knabayi, and Secretary, Mrs. Margaret Jethro, said that the strike would begin on Sept. 11.
Mrs. Shekwoyemi Amos, a mother of four, said the strike would not only affect the studies of the children but may also make them loiter around.
“Other children in private schools have resumed, and our children are asked to remain at home because their teachers are on strike.
“Now that they are done with the long holidays, they should be in school at the appropriate time like others.
Mr. Izang Agwom said that it was time for the government to begin to prioritise the education sector, as they have always promised.
Agwom said that education remained one of the most important factors for development and, as such, must not be toyed with.
“We continue to hope for a better Nigeria, yet we continue to play with one of the most important sectors of the economy.
“Education gives hope to our children and the next generation. We must not continue to play with the minds of these children, or else they lose focus, she said.
Mrs. Justina Saviour, a school proprietor, urged the relevant stakeholders in the education sector to address the lingering issue with the union.
Saviour said that if it was left unattended, some of the children affected may not meet up with their agemates.
She appealed to the government to consider the courage some parents took to send their children to school in spite of the economic challenges.
Supreme News reports that the union is protesting the non-payment of arrears of 25 months allowance and the non-implementation of the 40 percent peculiar allowance by the FCT council chairmen.
The union added that the authorities had also failed to pay other outstanding allowances, which it said included the non-implementation of promotion arrears.
Others are the non-upgrading of concerned teachers, the non-implementation of annual increments, and the non-implementation of the release of promotion letters to teachers, among others.