Ekiti State Government has shut seven
schools run by the Catholic Diocese of Ekiti for failure to pay the
Education Development Levy.
Under the new tax regime, pupils in primary and secondary schools are to pay N500 and N1,000, respectively.
The catholic schools had requested the government to exclude its schools from the payment, a request that was rejected.
The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of
Ekiti, Most Reverend Felix Ajakaye, who broke the news in Ado Ekiti,
accused the state government of being insensitive by shutting the
schools when students were preparing for their National Examinations
Council Examinations
Ajakaye said, “I am concerned about the
propriety of imposing any development levy on pupils and students in
Catholic mission schools in Ekiti State, moreover when our schools are
paying various levies and taxes demanded by both the local and state
governments respectively.
“The closure of the schools is very
painful personally to me. They are writing exams and government is
closing down their schools. That is insensitivity.”
The Diocese operates 15 primary and seven secondary schools in the state.
Confirming the development, the State
Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mr Jide Egunjobi,
said, “It is true we shut the catholic schools that failed to pay. Some
of them have paid and are operational. We only shut those that refused
to pay.
“We all agreed to the development levy at the education summit, so, there is no going back.”
Meanwhile, the Catholic Diocese has sued
the Ekiti State Government for imposing education development levies on
pupils in its primary and secondary schools.
In an originating summons filed at Ekiti
State High Court by the Incorporated Trustees of the Catholic Diocese
of Ekiti, the plaintiff asked the court to declare that imposition of
levies as illegal, unconstitutional and null and void.
It contended that the action violated
Section 2 of Compulsory Free Universal Basic Education Act 2004 and
Section 19 of Ekiti State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) Law.
The defendants are the Attorney General of Ekiti State and the Commissioner for Education.
The Church asked the court to determine
“whether every child of primary school and junior secondary school age
in Ekiti State is not entitled to free and compulsory basic education
under Section 2 of Compulsory Free Universal Education Act, 2004 and
Section 19 of Ekiti State Universal Basic Education Board Law.”
“If the imposition of education
development levy or any tax or levy on pupils and schools in Ekiti
State, including the claimants schools, by the defendants, does not
violate Section 2 of Compulsory Free Universal Basic Education Act 2004
and Section 19 of Ekiti State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB)
Law.
“Whether the defendants could impose
education development levy or tax on pupils and schools “without a law
validly passed by the Ekiti State House of Assembly” in view of some
sections of the Nigerian constitution.”
While praying the court to declare that
the defendants could not impose education development levy or tax on
pupils and schools, the palintiff also sought an order restraining the
defendants from further demand of the levy.
The Church also sought an order of
mandatory injunction directing the defendants to endorse and approve the
applications of students of its schools for the 2016 NECO examination
pending the determination of the substantive case.
It also sought a similar order for its pupils in the various primary schools run by the church in Ekiti Diocese.
Culled from Punch Newspaper,Nigeria
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