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Open University Matriculates 72 Kuje Prison Inmates
The National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) on Thursday matriculated 72 inmates of the Nigeria Correctional Service (NCoS), Kuje Medium Security Custodial Centre, Abuja to study various courses.
The Vice-Chancellor, NOUN, Prof. Olufemi Peters, urged the students to make use of their study materials judiciously.
The VC who was represented by the National Coordinator, Special Studies, NOUN, Mrs Modupe Adesina, described the collaboration between NOUN and NCoS as very smooth.
According to him, NOUN remains the largest in Africa and the only accredited single-mode Open and Distance Learning Institution in Nigeria.
“We have 12 study centres that are for inmates. We have 970 students from Correctional centres nationwide and we have graduated 42 inmates across the nation since 2012.
“We have five people enrolled for PhD programmes and still counting. We produced the best graduating students in 2014 in Enugu.
“And when you look at their results, they have been very studious, very eager to graduate with the best result,” he said.
Peters urged the public to encourage the federal government by employing the graduated inmates in the society to help them keep up with their lives outside the Correctional Centres.
He said the efforts of the government should be embraced as the inmates were fully sponsored to acquire the certificates from the University.
“The efforts of the government and the university should be encouraged. This is not a joke.
“The environment and society at large should embrace students coming from NOUN, particularly inmates from correctional centres.
“If they are out, that means they have most likely been reformed. Education goes a lot to open their mind and make them what society requires.
“A lot of them are gifted, they have gone beyond going to school, they have acquired several skills and not in any way lesser than anyone out there,” he said.
The VC expressed the determination of the open university toward ensuring that the newly admitted students were provided with an excellent learning environment with a view to making their study rewarding and satisfactory.
He urged them to desist from all forms of anomalies such as cultism, sexual harassment among others that exist in the conventional university, saying that NOUN was not a regular Open University.
The FCT Controller, NCoS, Ahmed Musa, said the NCoS had continued to deliver on this mandate through a plethora of academic and vocational skills acquisition, as well as psycho-social support programmes for inmates.
Musa said the significance of the occasion could not be overemphasised as it underscored the very core of the mandate of the NCoS.
This he said was to reform and rehabilitate those in its care and subsequently reintegrate them into society.
According to him, it is worthy of note that changing the behaviour and orientation of persons in conflict with the law and putting them on the right path is no mean task.
“The Kuje Custodial Centre has always been outstanding in academic exploits.
“Since the command embraced education as a foremost means of reformation in 2010, the centre has recorded over 850 students who have sat for their WAEC and NECO exams.
“Over 750 inmates passing outstandingly with over five credits, which include maths and English.
“With the advent of the National Open University, the centre has registered over a hundred students and also graduated about 10 BSc and one Master’s degree student,” he said.
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