Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) WhatsApp Telegram
    NEWS FAIRNEWS FAIR
    • Home
    • News

      Gov.Yusuf Orders Recruitment Of 2,616 Teachers, Confirms 4,315 Volunteers’ Absorption

      September 19, 2025

      GMLD President Laments Dependence On Imported Diagnostic Reagents

      September 17, 2025

      Our Government’s Stance Against Corruption Is Uncompromising – Kano Information Commissioner

      September 15, 2025

      Separated Nigerian Conjoined Twins Return Home After Successful Surgery in Saudi Arabia

      September 12, 2025

      Kano State Govt.Moves To Outlaw Same-Sex Marriage,Others

      September 12, 2025
    • Judiciary

      Dollar Video Scandal:Ex-Ganduje’s Chief Press Secretary Allegedly Retracts Statement As Witness Against Ja’afar Ja’afar

      August 29, 2025

      Kano Businessman,Tiamin, Well-wishers Hold Special Prayers After Court Judgement

      May 23, 2025

      Falana lauds Kano’s approach to criminal justice administration

      April 10, 2025
      72

      Queen Elizabeth the Last! Monarchy Faces Fresh Demand to be Axed

      January 20, 2021

      More Than a Dozen Extremist Groups Took Part in Capitol Riots

      January 19, 2021
    • Crime

      Akwa Ibom CP Azare Warns Against Using Masquerades To Cover Criminal Activities

      September 18, 2025

      Akwa Ibom Police Command Rescues 20 Trafficked Ghanaians

      September 4, 2025

      Crime:Kano Police Command Arrests 107 Suspects,Commends Officers

      September 1, 2025

      Thuggery:Kano Police Command Profiles 718 Repentant Youths

      August 21, 2025

      Bye-election:Police Arrest 333 Suspects In Kano State 

      August 18, 2025
    • Defense

      Insecurity:Tinubu Orders Immediate Overhaul Of National Security Strategies

      April 24, 2025
      72

      Queen Elizabeth the Last! Monarchy Faces Fresh Demand to be Axed

      January 20, 2021

      More Than a Dozen Extremist Groups Took Part in Capitol Riots

      January 19, 2021

      Sydney: 30 Homes Estimated to Have Been Destroyed by Fire

      January 18, 2021

      Details of Fiery Response to Trump’s Jibe During US Riots Call

      January 17, 2021
    • Sports

      Premier League: Deputy Senate President To Upgrade BUK’s Stadium

      August 19, 2025

      Sen.Barau Unveils Barau FC Technical Adviser, Players,Vows To Win NPFL

      August 11, 2025

      Managing, Playing For Kano Pillars A Difficult Job – Ahmed Musa

      July 11, 2025

      AI in Basketball: Could an Algorithm Really Predict Injuries?

      January 4, 2021

      Can Cash-Strapped Barcelona Afford to Keep Messi?

      January 4, 2021
    • More
      • Agriculture
      • Climate Change
      • Column
      • Culture
      • Economy
      • Entertainment
      • Opinion
      • Politics
      • Religion
      • Science and Technology
      • Security
    NEWS FAIRNEWS FAIR
    Home » From State of Emergency to National Glory: How Kano Rose to the Summit of NECO 2025
    Opinion

    From State of Emergency to National Glory: How Kano Rose to the Summit of NECO 2025

    EditorBy EditorSeptember 19, 202506 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter WhatsApp
    whatsapp image 2025 09 17 at 22.30.04 1458ea75 (1)

    From State of Emergency to National Glory: How Kano Rose to the Summit of NECO 2025

    By Lamara Garba Azare

    In a year when over a million Nigerian students wrote their Senior School Certificate Examination, it was Kano State that stood tallest, carrying the banner of academic excellence to the very summit of the nation’s performance chart. The 2025 NECO results have placed Kano not only at the head of the federation but also at the heart of a new story which is a story of revival, resilience, and reward for visionary leadership.

    When Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf declared a state of emergency in education last year, many thought it was rhetoric, the kind of political statement that usually fades once the campaigns are over. But Yusuf did more than talk. He gave life to his words by allocating a groundbreaking 30 per cent of the state’s annual budget to education, the highest in Nigeria, and then rolled out an Education Recovery Plan that touched every layer of the system.

    The results of that decision now speak louder than any campaign promise. Out of 1,358,339 candidates nationwide, 818,492 secured five credits including Mathematics and English, while 1,144,496 obtained five credits regardless of the two subjects. Yet it was Kano’s 68,159 candidates who took the spotlight, outshining Lagos and Oyo to claim first position in the nation.

    But Governor Yusuf did not stop there. As part of the deliberate policy, on Thursday, September 18th, he added fresh fuel to Kano’s education revolution by recruiting 4,315 former BESDA volunteer teachers into permanent and pensionable service. The event which took place at the Sani Abacha Indoor Stadium, where he handed appointment letters to the new recruits, the governor’s voice carried both hope and warning: “Dedication, integrity, and character-building must be your compass as you shape the future of our children.”

    This was not an isolated gesture. It builds on earlier approvals including 5,500 teachers in 2023, 5,632 in 2024, and another 4,000 in May 2025, all absorbed into the teaching workforce from the BESDA voluntary scheme.

    Perhaps, it is noteworthy that with Thurday’s recruitment, the governor has raised the army of educators even higher, reinforcing the frontline of a war against ignorance that Kano seems determined to win.

    To further oil the machinery of reform, Yusuf announced the recruitment of 2,616 additional teachers, a ₦200 million vehicle loan scheme, and the distribution of 444 motorcycles and 300 computers to strengthen school supervision and evaluation. In addition, the governor directed the reopening of Shehu Minjibir Boarding Primary School with 180 pupils, upgraded another school in Ungogo into a boarding facility, and ordered the engagement of 17,000 watchmen to protect schools across the state.

    Undeniably in Kano’s classrooms, the story of this victory is written in chalk dust, fresh paint, and renewed hope. At Rumfa College, where peeling walls and broken desks once defined the learning environment, newly refurbished classrooms now echo with optimism. “For the first time in years, we feel empowered to teach,” said Malam Abdullahi, a senior teacher. “These results are not by chance; they are the fruits of deliberate investment.”

    Parents, too, have felt the transformation. The burden of uniforms and textbooks has been lifted, replaced with free supplies provided by the state. “My daughter got her uniform, books, and sandals without me spending a naira,” said Aisha Ibrahim, a mother of three in Gwale. “I used the money I saved to enroll my two younger children. This is why I believe Kano is shining today.”

    The students themselves are the proudest storytellers. At Government Girls Secondary School, Dala, a cluster of jubilant graduates huddled together, celebrating their performance. “We had good teachers, new classrooms, and the encouragement to push harder,” said 17-year-old Fatima Sulaiman, who dreams of becoming a doctor. “This is not just our success, it is Kano’s success.”

    Observers see in this outcome more than just numbers, they see a revival. Years of neglect had left Kano’s education sector crumbling, with rising out-of-school children and collapsing infrastructure. Governor Yusuf’s interventions—rehabilitating schools, training teachers, offering scholarships, and pushing girl-child education—have stitched back the torn fabric of public education in the state. The Nigeria Union of Teachers, which earlier named him “Education Governor of the Year,” now calls this success the natural harvest of purposeful governance.

    Governor Yusuf himself, visibly elated, captured the spirit of the moment. “Our reforms are clearly yielding results, and this outstanding performance by our students proves that Kano is on the right path. Education remains our top priority, and we will continue working tirelessly to ensure no child in Kano is left behind,” he said.

    Beyond Kano, the nation is taking notice. Professor Grace Nnamani, an educationist at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, described the feat as “a wake-up call to other states.” She remarked: “Kano has shown that with serious investment, public schools can compete with the best anywhere in Nigeria. The model should not just be admired; it should be replicated.”

    Similarly, Dr. Mohammed Adamu, a policy analyst based in Abuja, said the achievement points to what Nigeria must do to fix its education crisis. “The success story in Kano is proof that education must not only be funded but funded with vision. This is the kind of leadership that should inspire a national rethink on how we prioritize our children’s future,” he noted.

    Indeed, Kano’s triumph in NECO 2025 is more than a milestone—it is a manifesto for Nigeria’s future. It shows that classrooms can be rebuilt, confidence can be restored, and excellence can be cultivated if leaders treat education as a sacred duty rather than an afterthought. What happened in Kano is not a miracle; it is the logical consequence of vision, investment, and courage.

    Therefore, as Nigeria grapples with the challenge of millions of out-of-school children and a struggling public school system, Kano has lit a lamp that others can follow. The state has become a model of what is possible when leaders invest in the minds of the young, and in doing so, invest in the destiny of the nation.

    The echoes of this success will not end with the publication of NECO’s results. They will ripple into the universities, the industries, and the communities of tomorrow. They will shape a generation of doctors, engineers, teachers, and dreamers who will look back and say: in 2025, Kano chose education, and by choosing education, it chose the future for itself, and for Nigeria.

    Lamara Garba Azare, a public affairs analyst, writes from Kano

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link

    Related Posts

    Falling Foodstuff Prices And The Retailers’ Recalcitrance

    September 15, 2025

    The Tears of Bauchi’s Retirees and Dr. Ali Pate’s Promise of Hope

    September 13, 2025

    Online Journalism:The Transformation,The Thrills,The Challenges

    September 10, 2025

    Old Age:The Grace,The Challenges

    September 8, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest Posts

    From State of Emergency to National Glory: How Kano Rose to the Summit of NECO 2025

    September 19, 2025

    Gov.Yusuf Orders Recruitment Of 2,616 Teachers, Confirms 4,315 Volunteers’ Absorption

    September 19, 2025

    Akwa Ibom CP Azare Warns Against Using Masquerades To Cover Criminal Activities

    September 18, 2025

    GMLD President Laments Dependence On Imported Diagnostic Reagents

    September 17, 2025

    Galaxy Backbone Announces Successful Recertification By ISO

    September 17, 2025

    CBN Holds Fair To Sensitize Kano Residents On Sustainable Economic Growth

    September 16, 2025

    Police Invite Daily Nigerian Publisher Ja’afar Ja’afar Over Alleged Criminal Conspiracy

    September 16, 2025
    Advertisement
    © 2025 NEWS FAIR.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.