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Reps mull inclusion of anti-corruption courses in Nigerian schools

The House of Representatives, yesterday, resolved to review the primary and secondary school curricula to integrate anti-corruption awareness courses and programmes.

This followed the adoption of a motion by Aisha Dukku at the plenary, jointly sponsored by Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila, Shehu Kakale, and Musa Bagos, in Abuja.

The motion emphasised the need to introduce anti-corruption classes and training into the primary and junior secondary schools’ curricula to aid in the fight against corruption.

According to the motion, this will be by convening a meeting of stakeholders in the education management and regulation sector to consider the need for the introduction.

Dukku said corruption remains a scourge with devastating consequences on every facet of the Nigerian state, society and sectors of the economy.

She said the House is aware of the various anti-corruption efforts by successive governments that had not put an end to corruption in the country.

She noted that unless drastic measures were taken with utmost urgency, corruption threatened to destroy the fabric of Nigerian society by continuously sabotaging the national sense of right and wrong beyond repair.

She also observed the increase of young people growing up in environments where casual subversions of the rule and law through acts of private and public corruption have become the norm.

Dukku argued that one reason the fight against corruption has not achieved the desired objectives in Nigeria is the absence of a deliberate national strategy.

“I am confident that this narrative can be changed quickly through sustained efforts by the government, civil society, religious organisations and citizens,” she said.

This, according to her, is by working together to reprogramme the way the citizenry thought about the causes and consequences of corruption in our society.

The House adopted the motion and urged the committees on Basic Education Services and Legislative Compliance to ensure compliance. (NAN)

…corruption remains a scourge with devastating consequences on every facet of the Nigerian state, society and sectors of the economy.

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