Following the outcry of a Facebook user over the ridiculous arrest of primary school pupils over failure to do their assignments, the school has been shutdown.

The students were taken away in the back of a police van
Sometime
in early February, the proprietress of the Early Dew Montessori school
in GRA Enugu, had arranged with some officers of the Enugu state police
command, to arrest some of the pupils simply because they had failed to turn in their assignments.
The
students were put behind a police van, an act which the proprietress
claimed was to 'discourage indiscipline, and also instill hard work and
good conduct among pupils'. She however shared the pictures on the
school's Parents-Teacher's Whatsapp forum, where according to her, some
parents even commended the action.
Explaining her actions, the proprietress, Mrs Ify Okonkwo, said:
“In my mind, I thought I was doing it
to bring the children up in a way that they will be attached to their
studies. No child was manhandled neither did they point a gun at any of
the children.
I was the person that took
the pictures and posted them on Whatsapp, with the caption ‘Some
children were arrested today for not doing their homework, for not
reading their books, for not behaving well, but they promised to
change’. I didn’t mean any harm; I meant well for the kids. If not, I
wouldn’t have made it public – it would have been between me and the
teachers.”
Following the outcry by a
Facebook user who shared the story, the Enugu state government stepped
into the situation by suspending the school's operations on Monday,
February 20.
The Enugu state Commissioner for
Education, Professor Uche Eze, said the issue was ‘an embarrassment to
the state government and a serious psychological abuse of the concerned
children’.

Primary school where students were arrested for not doing assignments, shutdown
He
however ordered the school's management to write an apology letter to
the state government, parents of the children and the entire people of
Enugu state, stating that these measures must be taken by the school or
they would face permanent closure.
The
commissioner said this action also serves as a warning to other schools
in the state who use such 'unethical practices' all in the name of
corporal punishment.
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