Parents Of Pupil Who Slapped Teacher For Slapping Their Child, Speak


 The parents of the pupil who was allegedly ass@ulted by his teacher in an Abuja-based school have come out to give their own side of the story.

In a statement released by their lawyers, the parents claim their child had repeatedly complained of repeated ass@ult from the said teacher. The aggrieved parents claim the repeated ass@ult had even started taking a tow on their child as he frequently complained of headache and blurred vision as a result of the slaps. The parents also claimed other students confirmed the repeated acts of ass@ult by the teacher.
The parents said they went to the school to seek a resolution only for them to be met with a teacher who was recounting the assault with ‘’chilling nonchalance’’ and speaking in a manner as if he was right to sl@p their child.
The parents also mentioned that the principal of the school was all about filming them. They stated that it was the teacher’s arrogant justification and their fierce parental love that forced them to descend on the teacher with sl@ps.
They argue that instead of intervening to restore order, the Principal shamelessly continued recording and later uploaded the footage to social media.
They demanded that within the next 24 hours, the school must Remove the video in its entirety from every platform, Conduct an independent investigation into the teacher’s conduct, Implement verifiable child-protection reforms to safeguard every pupil from targeted harm by peers or regrettably staff, retract all false claims regarding the child’s expulsion and the alleged refund of fees and produce and preserve all CCTV records of the child’s classroom which contains footages of the multiple times the child was assaulted by the teacher in the video.
They say failure to do this, they will be compelled to escalate the matter to the Federal Ministry of Education, the National Human Rights Commission, the Nigeria Police Force and the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory to seek all necessary legal remedies.

Post a Comment

0 Comments