Wednesday, 17 September 2014

Ebola: Schools Must Resume On September 22 – Jonathan

Ebola: Schools Must Resume On September 22 – Jonathan
goodluck jonathan 22

Ebola: Schools Must Resume On September 22 – Jonathan

President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday gave reasons why the September 22 resumption date for nursery, primary and secondary schools must stand, saying presently, there was no case of the Ebola Virus in the country to keep school children at home unnecessarily.
According to him, those calling for extension of the holiday failed to take into consideration the wrong signals the continued stay of school children at home would send to the international community about the Ebola situation in Nigeria.
Jonathan, who stated this, while addressing State House correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Abuja was reacting to threat by the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) to embark on strike over federal government’s refusal to extend the date back to the initial October 13 date.
He described the NUT’s threat as unnecessary and uncalled for, even as he noted that, while the Ebola disease had been effectively contained, in order to avoid sending a wrong message to the international community that the Ebola situation in the country had become worse, the federal government had put measures in place to deal with any possible future outbreak of the virus in the country.
He said, “Presently, there is no Ebola case in Nigeria; nobody in Nigeria has the disease now. Most of the people who came down with the disease have recovered. Out of the 19, we lost seven and the others have recovered, although there a few people we are still observing.
“I am not saying we may not record Ebola case again. As long as the disease is still in the West Coast – Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, the likelihood that a character like the Late Sawyer may come in through one way or the other is there. But government is also very mindful of that. Presently our air and sea ports as well as land border posts are properly protected. If Sawyer were to arrive the country now, no Nigerian would contact the virus because of the level of preparation.”
Observing that those calling for extension of the holiday were ignorant of the wrong signals it would send to the international community about the Ebola situation in the country, Jonathan contended that Nigerians were being stigmatised and segregated in other countries because of the negative narrative about the status of the virus in the country.
His words: “If you are a Nigerian today and you travel to some countries, they don’t even want you to enter the countries. Our athletes were segregated in China, they had to return back. In China they are even asking ministers of the Federal Republic to show proof of being free of the disease, and this is quite discouraging.
“What people don’t know is that as long as you close your institutions because of Ebola, the ambassadors from various countries that are here with us and the high commissioners send dispatches weekly or monthly to their home countries about what is happening in Nigeria.
“As long as we Nigerians close our public institutions because of Ebola, the dispatches that go out to the rest of the world is that Ebola is a problem in Nigeria. As long as we declare Ebola a problem in Nigeria, any Nigerian that travels out will be treated as somebody with Ebola.
“We’ve been able to manage the disease and the whole world is happy with us, and we must tell the world that we have managed Ebola and no Nigerian should be segregated because of Ebola. If NUT wants Nigeria to close schools until December, then invariably they are saying that until December Nigerians should be discriminated against.”
The president who applauded all Nigerians for their cooperation and support to government in the effective management of the situation also commended the state governors for their role in the success story, specifically those of Lagos and Rivers where cases of the disease were recorded.
He said, “First, I want to use this opportunity to thank all Nigerians in terms of managing the Ebola virus. This is one thing that the whole country came together, worked together. There was no issue of politics, there was no issues of religion, there was no issues of ethnicity. In fact that was why we were able to contain them. If Nigerians did not agree we wouldn’t have succeeded.
“I use this opportunity to thank all the governors because I met with all the governors‎ and all the commissioners for health and all the states set up mechinaries to manage the Ebola if at all it turned up. I have to specifically appreciate the governors of Lagos and Rivers State that had incidence of Ebola and how they worked with federal government to manage the situation.”

No comments:

Post a Comment