Wike Busy Renovating Infrastructure Despite Pupils Out of School Due to Strike – Peter Obi

Posted by Thandiubani on Thu 26th Jun, 2025 - tori.ng

Recall that public primary school pupils in Abuja have been locked out of schools for over three months due to an unresolved strike.

 
Former Labour Party presidential candidate, Mr Peter Obi has slammed the Minister of the Federal Capital Terroritory, Nyesom Wike.
 
He decried the ongoing strike that has resulted in school pupils in Abuja staying at home.
 
Recall that public primary school pupils in Abuja have been locked out of schools for over three months due to an unresolved strike.
 
Obi warned that a nation that ignores its children’s education is digging deeper into poverty, insecurity, and underdevelopment.
 
Activist, Verydarkman had earlier in the week protested alongside school pupils in Abuja over the matter.
 
“When the strike began, we all thought, ‘This is Abuja; it will only last for a day or two.’ But here we are, three months later, our children are still at home and we are busy renovating the infrastructure,” Obi said.
 
In a post on his X handle on Thursday, the former Anambra State Governor criticised the government’s failure to resolve the lingering industrial action, noting that physical infrastructure is not a substitute for an educated population.
 
Obi further stressed that education remains the most critical and immeasurable component of human development, citing global data linking higher educational attainment to greater national development.
 
The statement reads: “The most critical and immeasurable component of human development today is Education. It is a known and verifiable study that the more educated a nation is, the more developed it is. Consequently, the most important investment and policy a nation requires is educating its people, especially children, to secure their future.

“Nigeria was not only a signatory to the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) and Sustainable Development Goals, which emphatically emphasised education as a critical development yardstick, but also has as law Universal Basic Education, which means every child should have access to quality basic education. Yet, right here in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, public primary school pupils have been out of school for over three months due to a strike.

“When the strike began, we all thought, ‘This is Abuja; it will only last for a day or two.’ But here we are, three months later, our children are still at home and we are busy renovating the infrastructure.

“The foundation of societal development is an educated citizenry, not physical infrastructure. True development is about building people. It is about educating the next generation. A nation that ignores its children’s education is digging deeper into poverty, insecurity, and underdevelopment.

“We must prioritise investment in human capital, especially in basic education, healthcare, and pulling people out of poverty. That is how nations grow. That is how we build the New Nigeria that is possible.”
 
Popular Stories
5 Nigerians That Have Been Nominated For Grammy Awards
Omg! Pretty African Woman with Massive Backside Flaunts it on Social Media (Photos)
See the Airplane Biafra Legend, Odimegwu Ojukwu Used in Fleeing to Ivory Coast After the Civil War (Photos)
God Pulled Me Out of Mess - Anita Oyakhilome Talks Life After Split from Pastor Chris
See the Beautiful Wives of 9 Powerful Nigerian Pastors (Photos)


Copyright © 2025 Tori.ng - All rights reserved
Tori.ng is owned and managed by Cyclofoss Technologies Ltd.