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Lawmaker Wants Bill Banning Public servants’ Children From Private Schools To Include Politicians

News Investigators/ Member House Representative, Kayode Akiolu (APC- Lagos ) says he will support a  bill thar will  ban children of public servants from  attending private schools, if it includes  politicians.

The lawmaker said that such a  bill should make everybody put in their best interests for  national development.

He made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Lagos.

Mr Akiolu represents the Lagos Island II constituency of Lagos state in the 10th National Assembly.

NAN recalls  that the House of Representatives passed for first reading, a bill seeking to prohibit public and civil servants, including their immediate families, from patronising private schools and healthcare facilities in Nigeria.

The bill was sponsored by Mr Godwin Ogah, lawmaker representing Isuikwuato/Umunneochi Federal Constituency of  Abia.

Mr Akiolu said: “First things first, I hold a balanced view; what I mean is a balanced view on both sides.

“We are creating a democratic country, which is open, freedom of association, and  freedom of movement.

“However, on the other side, it is presently a proposed bill; maybe the benefit of the bill is to make sure that civil servants put in all the best.

“Also, if I am to support the bill, I would also want it to include all public servants, which includes us, the politicians.”

According to him, that is when the country’s education will be top-notch, world-class, saying, “Because my child is there, the Bank Secretary’s child is there, the President’s child is there.

“We have nowhere but our country. If they amend it to include children of politicians, I am in support 100 per cent,“ he said.

He said that the support also included visiting the country’s hospitals, saying the nation’s healthcare  required investing in, to arrest  medical tourism.

“We need to go back to the good old days when Saudi Arabia and some other countries sent their people to Nigeria, including the Saudi royal family.

“In the 60s, and  70s, the Saudi royal family were coming to invest in Ibadan to get treatment. Later, there was a  brain drain, and they  decided to take our doctors over to Saudi Arabia, in the 80s and mid-90s.

“There is always a reversal; the way people go to India, and  different countries of the world, is the way they  will start coming to Nigeria.

“So, I think its high time we looked inwards, into our country, “ Akiolu said.

NAN

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