hehehehe......As the indefinite strike embarked upon
by the Academic Staff Union of Universities continues, the union has
said it will not call it off until its demands to the government are
met.
ASUU had on Sunday embarked on a
nationwide strike, which has reportedly grounded academic activities in
about 80 federal and state universities across the country, over the
failure of the Federal Government to implement the 2009 agreement
between the two parties.
But the President of ASUU, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, told Fidelis Chidi Blog
during the week that members of the union would not return to the class
if the demands it had itemised to the government last November were not
implemented.
Ogunyemi said the strike would end “when
the government is ready to do the right thing as we spelt out during
our engagement with the government at the National Assembly in November
last year.”
And when asked the least that the
government would have to do to get the striking lecturers back to their
classrooms, the ASUU president replied that an action plan involving
about seven items must be followed.
He said, “The least has been defined. In
November last year, when we went to the National Assembly, the issues
were itemised, seven, eight of them. The government was expected to have
followed that pathway, to follow what I would call the action plan for
resolving the matter.
“But for deviating from the action plan,
the government exposed itself to the suspicion that it didn’t mean
well. If it meant well, it must go back to that plan and from there, we
address the issues.
“The government has defined the process
for addressing the problem; it just needs to go back to it. It is
because it didn’t act on the understanding, that is why we are back to
where we are. This action was needless; it is like we were forced into
it. Implementation must commence and the implementation we are talking
about is not the issue of renegotiation.”
Speaking on some of the agreements,
Ogunyemi noted that government had reneged on a 2013 agreement to
revitalise universities with N1.3tn over a period of six years.
“The first year, the government was to
release N200bn, which it did, but it took a long time for us to access
it. But since that release in 2013, no single kobo has been released
thereafter.
“For 2014, N220bn was not released.
Again 2015 and 2016, nothing was released up to the third quarter of
2017. In all, we can estimate the outstanding amount to be about N825bn
for revitalisation of our universities,” he said.
He said Nigeria loses N500m to education
tourism annually within Africa, while accusing the ruling class of
killing the country’s education system so that their children, who were
given quality education abroad, could return to dominate the poor. “In
the last two years, what has been allocated to education in the budget
is between six and seven per cent. Even in countries where they had wars
like Rwanda and Sudan, they are still allocating well above 20 per cent
to education. Our citizens are rushing to Ghana, most universities
there are public universities,” he said.
A meeting between the Federal Government
and ASUU on Thursday was deadlocked and the latter consequently
rejected government’s request to end the strike.
It was learnt that the two parties had
failed to agree on the demand of the union that universities should be
exempted from using the Treasury Single Account.
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