Obi Laments Prolonged Strike by FCT Primary School Teachers

Eric Patrick

Former Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi, has expressed deep concern over the ongoing strike by public primary school teachers in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), which has kept pupils out of classrooms for more than three months.

He called for urgent intervention to resolve the impasse and ensure that teaching and learning resume without further delay.

The one-time Anambra state governor made this known in a statement shared on his X handle (Formerly Twitter) on Thursday.

Obi in his statement described education as the most critical and immeasurable component of human development, emphasising that a nation’s progress is closely tied to the education of its people.

“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,” he said.

According to him, Nigeria is not only a signatory to the Millennium Development Goals and Sustainable Development Goals both of which prioritise education as a key development indicator but also has the Universal Basic Education law in place to guarantee every child access to quality basic education.

He also expressed dismay that despite these frameworks, primary school pupils in Abuja, the nation’s capital, have been out of school due to a prolonged strike.

READ ALSO: PHOTOS: Peter Obi Visits Ex-AGF Malami in Abuja

“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,” he said.

Obi noted that, focusing on physical infrastructure while neglecting education is a misplaced priority.

“The foundation of societal development is educated citizenry, not physical infrastructure. True development is about building people. It is about educating the next generation,” he said.

Obi warned that ignoring children’s education equates to deepening poverty, insecurity, and underdevelopment. He called for a renewed focus on human capital development.

“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,” Obi concluded.

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