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{UAH} MPs alarmed as Kenyan buses ferry pupils from Uganda

Folks;

Cross border bsiness, including schooling, is common in Africa. 

Nigeria porimary and secondary schools teach day students from Cameroon, Chad and Niger who cross the boder daily. Same thing in Tanzania, where you find students from Mozambique and zambia. That's partly why Kiswahili is widely spoken in those two countries. So, based on this popular tradition, I wouldn't blame Ugandan parents for transporting their kids to Kenya.

However, the timing is inopportune. The parents should have put their children's classroom education on hold, and wait out Kenya's struggle to contain the spread of Covid 19.

Pojim



Lawmakers on the Education Committee yesterday asked government to stop Kenyan buses from ferrying learners from Uganda amid rising cases of Covid-19.

Kenya has over the last two months been battling a second wave of the pandemic, which has seen some of its counties put under lockdown.

Mr Godfrey Macho (Busia Municipality, NRM) said at least 11 buses from Kenya pick up more than 500 nursery and Primary One pupils from Uganda every morning and bring them back in the evening.

"As some of our schools remain closed to some learners, Ugandan children at the Busia border are being taken to Kenya to import Covid-19. About 500 children go through the Ugandan border manned by government officials to a country we all know has high cases of Covid-19," Mr Macho said.

He said this poses a serious danger since children can transmit the virus to their families back in Uganda.
"I have raised this issue several times but government is keeping a deaf ear," Mr Macho said.

The MPs were meeting a team from ministry of Education led by State minister for Higher Education John Chrysostom Muyingo to defend their budget estimates for the Financial Year 2020/2021.

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The committee chairperson, Mr Jacob Opolot, tasked the minister to explain why the practice has continued.
Mr Muyingo acknowledged the challenge and promised to seek audience with his Kenya counterparts.

"I am taking this matter seriously because it is not only in Busia but across all our borders. I am going to seek audience with the Prime Minister and we shall organise a meeting with the Internal Affairs ministry to come up with a solution as soon as possible," he said.

Whereas most pupils have returned to school after more than a year at home, those in nursery or kindergarten, Primary One, Primary Two and Primary Three are yet to.
Mr Muyingo also asked police to hasten investigations into the cause of fire that gutted a girls' dormitory at King's College Budo on Tuesday.

The minister told Daily Monitor  in an interview after the committee meeting that government had put in place guidelines requiring each school to have fire extinguishers and committees, but this has largely not been adhered to due to budget constraints.

He challenged schools to ensure they invest more in mitigating fi


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