Inmate Bags PhD, Prison Controller Appeals For More Volunteer Teachers
Chinyere Nwachukwu: The Controller of Prisons, Lagos State Command,
Tunde Ladipo, says education in prison facilities is getting better by
the day, with an inmate in the Maximum Prison undergoing a PhD
programme.
Ladipo told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that things were
looking up, especially with the commitment of officials and performance
of inmates.
The controller spoke to NAN on the sideline of the 2017 Ikoyi Prisons Education Award held in Lagos on Thursday.
He said that aside from he inmate taking a PhD programme at the maximum
prison, which is in Kirikiri, several others, both at the facility and
the Ikoyi Prisons, were also undergoing Master’s degree programmes in
various fields.
The controller said that despite being in incarceration, many prisoners
had shown zeal to acquire education, even at the highest level.
Ladipo said the state of education facilities in prisons across the
country was receiving a boost following the directive of the
Controller-General of the Nigerian Prisons, Alhaji Ja’afaru Ahmed, that
all their schools must be functional.
“He is very much interested in the reformation of the inmates,
especially as it concerns their welfare and has instructed that the
education of inmates must be taken seriously.
“ He has directed that all the schools within the walls of the prisons must be equipped and functional.
“The controller-general also directed that we ensure too that our
inmates are reformed spiritually and ensure that their welfare is always
on the front burner.
“He has gone a step ahead by providing drugs that will serve for not less than two years for inmates in prisons nationwide.
“This is coupled with the acquisition and distribution of operational
vehicles, such as the Green Maria, ambulances, escort and sewage
vehicles as all as official cars,’’ Ladipo said.
He said that in a bid to achieve accelerated growth and national
transformation, every Nigerian must be given equal education
opportunity, irrespective of where they may find themselves.
Ladipo said that the prison, as a reformation centre, must not be an
exclusion, as those in there, are equally entitled to their rights to be
educated.
“That is why we are putting every resource available at our disposal in
ensuring that we make life conducive for the inmates by also bringing
all levels of education to them within the facility.
“The essence of bringing these persons to the prisons is to change their
lives and empower them for the better in the future,’’ he said.
Ladipo recalled that in 2015, the Maximum Security Prison School had
produced a Master’s degree holder while still serving a jail term.
He, however, said the feat was not single-handedly achieved, but with
the collaboration of some religious and non-governmental organisations.
“We appreciate their contributions, and like Oliver Twist, we are asking
for more interventions from members of the public,’’ Ladipo said.
The prison boss assured that management would speak with the authorities
on the need to provide a standard CBT centre for the conduct of the
Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination by JAMB for the inmates.
He also appealed for more volunteer teachers to assist in the teaching
of various subjects in the schools, especially as more inmates were
yearning for education by the day.