States including Ogun, Katsina, Bauchi, Enugu, Sokoto, Gombe and Ekiti on Sunday ruled out full reopening of schools, including tertiary institutions, despite the success recorded so far in the fight against COVID-19.
Officials of the state governments, in separate interviews with Reporter said they would not follow the Lagos State example.
Recall that schools in the country were closed in March as part of measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
But Senior Secondary School 3 students were called back on August 4 to write the West African Senior School Certificate Examination, which started on August 17.
No fewer than 53,727 cases had been confirmed in the country as of August 29.
Lagos had recorded 18, 104 cases; the Federal Capital Territory, 5,149 cases and Oyo State, 3,107 cases. Also, Kano State had also record 1,725 cases as of August 29.
On Saturday, Lagos State, which was the epicentre of the virus until a few weeks ago, said its schools would resume in September.
The state Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, who disclosed this, said higher institutions would resume on September 14, while the resumption date for primary and secondary schools was tentatively fixed for September 21.
He said the decision was informed by the decline in the number of COVID-19 cases in the state.
The Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 had on Thursday said coronavirus epicentre had shifted from Lagos State to Plateau State.
On Sunday, the Ogun State Government said it was not in a hurry to reopen tertiary institutions, secondary and primary schools.
The government said it would avoid taking an uninformed decision to reopen schools because Lagos State had made the announcement to reopen schools.
The Special Adviser to the governor on Public Communications, Remmy Hazzan, in an interview with a reporter, said the state government shut the schools based on the Federal Government’s order and would reverse the order based on the same method.
He said “We will look at the various database and use empirical data available.
“The indicator that will determine when we are going to open depends majorly on the Federal Government`s readiness to reverse the order so that we will not be seen as a state that is anti-Federal Government.
“That is on one side. The second one is that even at that we will still rely on empirical data that science provides to guarantee the safety of our children when they return to school. So the fact that Lagos has done it is not an indicator that we have to be in a hurry to do it.”
We won’t follow anybody’s timetable – Ekiti coordinator
On his part, the Coordinator of the Ekiti State COVID-19 Response Task Force, Prof Bolaji Aluko, said the state government would observe happenings in the secondary schools.
Aluko said, “We won’t follow any person’s timetable. We want to see events after the WASSCE and the JSSCE, whether students got sick, whether teachers got sick. So far, we have not seen any breakdown of students or teachers falling ill. We are still studying them. If there is no outbreak of illness, then we may start the schools.
“But for now, we have not decided. We have not known the basis for the directive in Lagos State. But there is the possibility that our tertiary institutions resume this year. I think secondary schools also, before the end of the year. I have asked around, we have not seen any hot spot of COVID-19 as far as the ongoing examinations are concerned.
The Enugu State Government also said it was in contact with the Federal Ministry of Education, saying there were no plans to reopen schools.