“We gave the materials to the school. Most of these people don’t have what it takes to meet their basic medical needs because they live in shanties and in thatched houses. So, they are prone to medical issues.
“You know that schools have just resumed and a lot of the parents don’t have enough to send their children to school. Even the teachers are volunteers. “We owe it a duty to our country as individuals and as organisations. The only way we can contribute to a safe country is to care for the displaced persons because most of the people have been displaced from Borno to Nasarawa and many other places.
He called on other Nigerians and the government to help, adding that all the teachers in the school were volunteers.