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No Future Without Our Language: Experts Warn of Danger to Nigerian Children

By Khalid Idris Doya   Nigeria's newly announced language policy has generated public outcry by some Nigerians, one of them ...

By Khalid Idris Doya 

Nigeria's newly announced language policy has generated public outcry by some Nigerians, one of them the President of the Bauchi Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (BACCIMA), Hon. Aminu Mohammed Danmaliki has said that Nigeria's new language policy contradicts global best practices and could undermine education, culture, and national identity.

Danmaliki described the policy as "A step backward for education and national identity." He called on the Federal Ministry of Education, NINLAN, NERDC, state ministries, traditional institutions, civil society, and the media to urgently review the policy to protect Nigeria's linguistic and cultural sovereignty.

Aminu while addressing a press conference on Wednesday in Bauchi said "Nigeria's decision goes against global best practices and its own educational heritage. Language is not just a tool of communication it is a vessel of culture, thought, and identity. A nation that neglects its languages risks intellectual dependency and cultural extinction."

Danmaliki reminded Nigerians that the federal government already has agencies mandated to protect and strengthen indigenous languages. These include the National Institute for Nigerian Languages (NINLAN), Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC), National Council for Arts and Culture (NCAC), and national broadcasting agencies.

Alhaji Aminu Danmaliki argued that countries like China, France, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Tanzania, and Ethiopia prioritise the mother tongue as the foundation of national development, saying that Nigeria is moving in the opposite direction, despite being a long-standing signatory to UNESCO and UN conventions promoting mother-tongue education.

"The UNESCO and UN conventions, along with Nigeria's previous National Policy on Education (NPE), emphasized the use of a child’s first language or community language in the early years of schooling. The new policy, however, reaffirms English as the primary medium from the outset," Danmaliki said.

"Research from UNESCO (2003) and the World Bank (2021) shows that children learn best in a language they understand. Early literacy in the mother tongue improves learning in other languages, preserves culture and identity, boosts self-esteem, encourages community participation, and reduces school dropout rates," he added.

Aminu Danmaliki warned that abandoning indigenous languages could lead to cognitive disadvantages, making it harder for children to grasp abstract concepts, cause cultural alienation and disconnection from heritage and I
Increase inequality, as rural and disadvantaged children fall behind their urban peers.

"While English provides a neutral, unifying platform in Nigeria's multiethnic context, making it the exclusive medium of instruction at foundational levels is pedagogically unsound and socioculturally harmful," he added..

The stakeholder recommended a balanced approach including early primary education (P1-P3). Teach in mother tongue while gradually introducing English, upper primary levels (P4 onward). Transition to bilingual or English-dominant instruction once the child’s conceptual foundation is solid, "Countries like Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Finland successfully follow this model, using local languages to build literacy and innovation," he noted.

Danmaliki emphasised that English-only instruction could have severe consequences that millions of children may fail to grasp core concepts early, indigenous languages risk erosion or extinction, and education could become foreign-oriented and disconnected from local realities.

"A people that abandons its language abandons its history, worldview, cultural memory, and sense of belonging. Indigenous knowledge in medicine, agriculture, governance, conflict resolution, and ethics is carried in our languages. Weakening them weakens our intellectual heritage."

Studies across Africa show that children learn faster, literacy improves, cognitive development increases, and dropout rates drop when mother tongue instruction is used.

Danmaliki proposed a forward-looking policy that strengthens mother-tongue education at early levels, trains more indigenous language teachers via NINLAN, expands indigenous language broadcasting and publishing, and digitises Nigerian languages and makes them AI-friendly, encourages indigenous language use in governance, commerce, and creative industries as well as protects minority languages from extinction.

"Nigeria's strength lies in its diversity. Our indigenous languages are not obstacles; they are resources, treasures, and pillars of identity," he emphasised.

He emphasised that the new policy must be reassessed for the sake of national unity, social justice, and the future of Nigerian children.

He added that outside Africa, every major region uses its indigenous language as the primary medium of instruction, while Africa largely retained colonial languages. This has resulted in poor comprehension, low literacy, high dropout rates, weak innovation, cultural confusion, and endangered local languages.

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