Lagos Rejects Hijab In Public Schools
Lagos State Government says pupils in its public schools are only allowed to wear conventional uniforms to the school.
It added that usage of other appendages, including Hijab, a head scarf for Muslim women, would not be allowed.
The
Commissioner for Education Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye, said this on
Tuesday at a press briefing in Ikeja, adding that usage of Hijab and
other religious materials in public schools was against government’s
policy.
She said, “I summoned a stakeholder’s
meeting that was chaired by the Commissioner for Home Affairs and
Culture, Alhaji Oyinlomo Danmole. The Muslim students were represented
at the meeting, Lawyers were represented. We discussed the issue at
length and we reached certain agreement.
“We agreed
that students could only use their Hijab when they want to go for
prayers, when they want to read Qur’an, and when they are going for
Jumat prayer on Fridays.
“It was agreed that no student should wear Hijab on her uniform. Doing so will cause confusion and break down of the law.
“Whoever
wish that his daughter should be wearing Hijab while going to school
and within the school should send such child to a private Muslim
school,”
The commissioner, who said the government
was committed to overhauling the education sector, added that the
administration had spent over N7bn in upgrading the Lagos State
University.
Oladunjoye added that the government would continue to provide qualitative education “by all means”.
She
said various educational development programmes like Eko Project,
Support Our Schools Initiative, and specialised development programmes
for teachers and administrators in 20 specialised areas, were parts of
government programmed to boost education.
She said,
“For the teachers and administrators, we are boosting their capacities
in areas such as subject mastery, leadership, classroom management,
assessment and evaluation, ICT, Basic Accounting and many others.”
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