Senator Shehu Sani has commended the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari for the good work, and noted that it
is yet to take the masses to the promise land as promised.
While speaking with newsmen on Friday in Zaria, Kaduna State, the APC senator representing Kaduna Central Shehu Sani, commended President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration for rescuing the
country from the abyss.
The ouspoken politician who disclosed that the APC government was striving to restore dignity of the country at different levels, said; “Nigerians are suffering, they are in
poverty and there is no confidence between the masses and those in position of authority except Buhari.”
The senator who spoke on the side lines of the 10th National Conference of School of
General Education, Federal College of Education, Zaria, noted the tremendous achievements recorded by Buhari in the
areas of security, corruption and changing the image of Nigeria abroad.
He expressed satisfaction that the APC-led government had moved Nigeria away from the deft of hopelessness, “but yet to take us
to the promise land’’.
“Nigerians are suffering, they are in poverty and there is no confidence between the masses and those in position of authority
except Buhari.
“The masses in Nigeria have confidence only in President Buhari but no any other politician,” he however said.
He alerted that: “If this change agenda fails, Nigerians have no option than to start a revolution in this country, because they have
to take the destiny in their hands.
“If the progressive political class do not perform better from the conservative political class, then the next thing is revolution; that is what is going to happen.”
On education, Sani lamented that it was only in Nigeria that some schools don’t collect school fees in the domestic Naira except in
foreign currencies.
“It is unfortunate that there are some schools in Nigeria that don’t receive school fees in Naira but in U.S. Dollar, British Pounds
and Euros.
“These schools don’t operate with our local education curriculum, they use Oxford, Cambridge or Bosten curriculum. This is
serious and highly unacceptable, we must urgently do something about it,” he said.
The lawmaker assured that he would take the matter up at the National Assembly, promising to pursue it to the end for the
benefit of Nigerian education system.
He stressed the need for the society to appreciate teachers, because “without teachers there could have been nobody in
position of authority today”.