9th January, 2023
PRESS RELEASE:
MURIC TO ZAMFARA
: PAY RETIRED TEACHERS
An Islamic
human rights organisation, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), has appealed to
the Zamfara State Government (ZASG) to pay the entitlements of retired
teachers, contract workers and other retirees before the gubernatorial
elections are held in February 2023. According to the group, it is only by
doing so that the state government can claim to be responsible and humane.
This was
disclosed in a statement released on Monday, 9th January, 2023 by
the director of MURIC, Professor Ishaq Akintola.
The statement
reads :
“Some retired
teachers and contract workers who worked in Zamfara State but whose
entitlements are yet to be paid have reached out to the Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC). They are facing hunger, starvation and abject poverty. They now live
in inhuman conditions with nothing to eat from morning till evening. They found
themselves at the bottom of the towering pyramid of misery and became executive
beggars overnight.
“Men and
women who have worked in the state for more than twelve years under the Zamfara
State Teachers Service Board, Gusau, are being disengaged without notice since
2020 till today. Those disengaged even at the end of the month are not paid
salary for that month.
“This
practice is illegal, illegitimate and unconstitutional. Apart from the legal
angle, Islam as a religion lays emphasis on good treatment of workers, empathy
and kindness. Disengaging workers without notice and for no professional
anomaly is an infringement on their Allah-given fundamental human rights.
“Besides, welfare
package in Zamfara State civil service appears to be non-existent. The
education sector is the worst hit by this poor treatment of workers. There is
no promotion for teachers, no annual salary increment, no minimum wages, no
pension and no compensation of any kind.
“The
classroom scenario is worse than what obtains in refugee camps. A single
teacher handles more than a hundred pupils in a poorly ventilated classroom. The
libraries are so badly equipped that teachers have to go on internet to source
for materials for their notes of lesson. Science subjects receive little or no
patronage from students because the laboratories are fit only for the Stone
Age.
“The problem can be traced to the low percentage allocated to
education in the state’s budget every year. For instance, although Government
House alone received N21.8 billion of the N142.7 billion budget in 2021,
education, health and works together got a paltry N19.36 billion. Whereas the
amount and percentage of the N159.5 billion 2022 budget is still not well
known, education still featured very low in the 2023 budget as the crucial zone
received a meager N21.2 billion out of a robust figure of N188.8 billion which
translates to 11.2%.
“MURIC appeals to the state government to pay its retirees
before this coming gubernatorial election. The education sector must put on a
human face and prepare for urgent overhauling. Economic progress in the state depends
on the seriousness with which the state government approaches education matters
in the state. The time to do this is now.
“The case of serving and retired teachers need urgent attention
if only the state government appreciates the role teachers play in the lives of
those who are benefiting from education today. It was teachers who taught those
who are in positions of authority today, from the permanent secretaries to the
state governor. Who among them did not pass through teachers?
“We are aware that the case of Zamfara may not be an isolated
one as there may be worse situations in other states. We therefore urge all
state actors to borrow a leaf from this advocacy.”
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC)
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