Tag: ASUP

  • Still on Polytechnic teachers strike

    Still on Polytechnic teachers strike

    SIR: It is almost a year now that academic activities in federal polytechnics across the country has been halted as a result of the prolonged strike action by the Academic Staff of Union of Polytechnics (ASUP).The most pathetic of all in the unfolding tragedy is the media blackout for the first four months of the strike.

    The major part of ASUP demands is the repeal of the Polytechnic Act and also the implementation of the White Paper of Federal Government Polytechnic Visitation Committee. These two demands are very germane if truly we really need polytechnics that will play a vital role in the educational, scientific and technological progress of Nigeria. Polytechnics are established to train and produce the technical manpower necessary for execution of the nation’s development plans, goals and strategies.

    One other demand of the striking polytechnic lecturers is the establishment of National Polytechnic Commission (NPC). This is because the National Board for Technical Education Act 9 of January 1977, which places Polytechnics under the purview of the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), has outlived its usefulness. Current demands on polytechnic education require an abrogation of the law.

    But then, the core of the demands of the striking polytechnic teachers is the issue of underfunding. The results of manifest under-funding of our Polytechnics are to be found in the poor maintenance of existing facilities and infrastructures, of crammed spaces and unwholesome learning environment. Today, students contribute money to buy markers, white board, board, chalk and practical materials in their various campuses just as campus hostels are noting to write about.

    Now that the strike is nearing a whole year, Academic Staff of Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) needs to step up the struggle with mass protests to draw attention to the issues; the National Association of Nigeria Polytechnic (NAPS) must be ready to mobilize Nigerian Polytechnic students to compel the government to meet the demands of lecturers. It is only through this we can fight and win the struggle for revitalization of Nigeria Polytechnics.

    • Dimeji Macaulay

    Minna, Niger State.

     

  • YABATECH ASUP to protest lingering poly strike

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) Chapter, on Monday said it would protest on April 8, to sensitise the public on the polytechnics’ six-month-old strike.

    Mr Adeyemi Aromolaran, Chairman of the Chapter, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that the protest was to draw attention to the Federal Government’s lukewarm attitude to its demands.

    He said the union was not bothered by the government’s `no work, no pay’ directive, describing it as an old policy, which would not yield any positive result.

    “Majority of our members have vowed to continue with the strike, in spite of the no work, no pay threat.

    “We have been expecting such directive; it is the only weapon that government always uses to frustrate union members,’’ he said.

    Aromolaran said, however, that few members of the union were afraid of the threat, adding that a majority of the members were solidly in support of the struggle.

    “ We have been able to eliminate the fear from the mind of the few members, and we will continue with the strike until our demands are met,’’ he added.

    Aromolaran expressed the members’ readiness to surmount any pressure from the government to discourage them from carrying on with the strike.

    “The threat will not yield any result for the government, as we are determined to fight the battle to finish.

    “This is not the first time such a directive will be issued; but in the end, the government will still pay the money; so, what is the need for the threat,’’ the chairman said.

    He said the union would study the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) drafted by the Presidential Committee in March, adding that the document would determine the union’s next line of action with government.

    “The document will decide our next line of action; the union will study it and see if it is favourable to its members’ cause.

    “The union will call a National Executive Council meeting by the middle of April to take a stand; we cannot suspend the strike without a NEC decision,’’ he said.

    Aromolaran urged the government to consider the impact of the lingering strike on the students, whose time was being wasted by the lingering strike.

    “Government should stop toying with the future of the students; it is a sign of government’s insensitivity to polytechnic education, if it allows the strike to linger on,’’ Aromolaran added.

  • ASUP-erlative action

    A quick quiz for you: a people are as good as their leaders, their constitution, their institutions and even their country: true or false? True, to a large extent. A native saying corroborates this truism that if you consider your farm as truly your farm, so it shall be and when you refer to it as that farm of mine, so too it shall be. Hardball indulges in Monday’s outing by polytechnic students in Lagos protesting the strike by their teachers, the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics, ASUP. Believe it or not, for about five months, nearly half of an academic session, all the federal polytechnics and colleges of technology have been shut because of a trade dispute between lecturers and the government.

    Recall that the nation was held in thrall for about half of last year because university lecturers (Academic Staff of Union of Universities, ASUU) also downed tools largely because of the government’s nonchalance and insouciance. Apparently the ASUP crisis predated ASUU but we wager that ASUU may have been main-streamed because it affects us more. The same reason why ASUP were neglected and ASUU were highlighted is the same reason crisis persists in the polytechnic campuses today. In their uncanny manner, Nigerian policy makers have managed to down-grade this cadre of technical education, making its certificate seem inferior even though the content of their curriculum may not be inferior to the university system.

    So at job interviews, in offices and at every turn, graduates of higher technical education are openly discriminated against and made to seem like second class citizens who committed some mortal offence by enrolling for inferior technical certificates in government-established technical institutions. But Hardball in this piece is not about the fine details of the pros and cons of these two cadres of pedagogy. We are here concerned about the gallant action of last Monday spear-headed by a non-governmental organisation, Education Rights Campaign (ERC).

    According to reports, ERC’s national co-ordinator Hassan Soweto Taiwo led the students under the aegis of Concerned Students Against Education Commercialization, (COSATEC). The protest, which comprised students of polytechnics across Lagos State, started at 9am from Yaba College of Technology spreading on to Ikorodu road, the major road artery linking Lagos Mainland with the Island. The placards-wielding students held up traffic for hours as they sang, danced and laid on the road. It was albeit, a very peaceful protest which was well organised, regulated and turned out most effective.

    The students had yielded way without letting the protest get out of hand. To underscore their seriousness, one of the leaders said, “We cannot stay at home and watch the strike continue. This is the first phase of the protest; it will continue next week, if the government refuses to implement the agreement it signed with ASUP.” It is indeed a superlative effort by these youths in organising this protest in a most civilised manner; making the point without allowing any mishap of any kind. Nigerian youths must do more of this kind of creative and peaceful agitation in order to keep the authorities in check.

    We ask: what is the Presidency thinking as students stayed home on forced holidays for 9 months? What is the education minister doing as an entire academic session is lost? Is there a worse index of irresponsibility? An up and doing minister who cares about legacy, who is not distracted by politics, will never allow this to happen. Will government act now?

  • Poly students  protest ASUP strike in Lagos

    Poly students protest ASUP strike in Lagos

    Polytechnic students in Lagos State took to the streets yesterday to protest the on-going strike by the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP). The strike is in its ninth month.

    They disrupted traffic flow along the ever-busy Ikorodu Road, causing a gridlock that extended as far as Yaba on the Lagos Mainland.

    The students, under the aegis of Concerned Students Against Education Commercialisation (CASATEC), began the protest by 9am at the Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH).

    They displayed placards with various inscriptions like: “We are tired of staying at home”, “We want to go back to classroom”, “Spend money on education, not on confab”, “The idle mind is the devil’s workshop”, “Education is a right not privilege”, and “We are tired of watching Africa Magic”.

    Hassan Taiwo Soweto, National Coordinator, Education Rights Campaign (ERC), who led the students in the protest, said the strike had affected them negatively.

    “We are out in the streets to show our displeasure at the ASUP strike and for the government to meet our demands; we are tired of staying at home and also most of the students are now engaging in immoral acts,” he said.

    Another ERC member, Adeeko Kehinde, said: ‘’Government should meet ASUP’s demands instead of spending millions of naira on National Confab. Also B.Sc certificate should equate HND because apart from spending more years in school than the university students, our experience, if not more, will be equal to theirs.”

    Deputy Coordinator, ERC, Lateef Adams, said the aim of the protest was to appeal to the Federal Government to implement the agreement it signed with ASUP, adding that failure to implement the agreements would lead to the continuation of the protest.”

    “As responsible students, we cannot stay at home and watch the strike continue. This is the first phase of the protest; it will continue next week if the government refuses to implement the agreement before next week,” he said.

    Also the coordinator of ERC, YABATECH branch, Lateef Ibrahim called for unity and collaboration among the students to continue with the protest despite criticisms from some quarters.

    When the students got to the top of the bridge at Maryland, they played music, danced and stood there for sometime, while vehicle users were forced to watch their antics until they dispersed after about an hour. They hijacked five empty BRT buses which conveyed them back to YABATECH.

    Some pedestrians and policemen praised the students for their courage and hoped that the government would listen to them and act on the situation.

    Mr Joshua Ayokunmi, Speaker, Student Union Government, YABATECH, urged government to end the strike to save the future of youths studying in polytechnics.

    Ayokunmi said the protest was to draw government’s attention to the yearnings of the students who were being affected by the strike.

    “We are protesting to show our frustration and we do not support the strike. We are not happy with the government because the strike is being prolonged unnecessarily. We want the government to meet the demands of our lecturers so that we can go back to school. We are pleading,” he said.

     

  • ASUP chair wins NUC best PhD thesis in Arts

    Chairman Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), FEDPOFFA Dr. Sola Adetunji Ojeniyi, has won the 2012 Nigerian Universities Doctoral Thesis Award Scheme (NUDTAS), organised by the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    Ojeniyi’s Doctoral Thesis in Arts won best in 2012 throughout the country. He was among the 17 winners honoured by the National Universities Commission (NUC) in Abuja.

    Ojeniyi attributed his success to hard work and sheer determination for success. He also thanked his supervisor, Prof. Victoria Adunola Alabi, of the University of Ilorin.

    He hinted that writing doctoral theses required a lot of technicalities; the knowledge of which he said, helped him immensely on his project.

    His thesis is the best in all doctoral theses of 2012 in Arts. This is despite being the only polytechnic staff among PhD students under the supervision of Prof. Alabi.

  • ASUP strike shuts out two million students

    ASUP strike shuts out two million students

    The eight-month old strike of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) has forced over two million students out of school, the National Secretary of ASUP, Nda Umar, has said.

    He spoke yesterday at a rally organised by the Federal Polytechnic, Bida chapter of the union. The rally was at the palace of the Chairman of Niger State Council of Traditional Rulers and Etsu Nupe, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar.

    Umar told the royal father that the union chose to press home their demand through the traditional leaders in the country following government refusal to meet their demands. .

    Umar told the monarch that the union has a 13-point demand, which was reduced to four by the Supervising Minister of Education Nyeson Wike to four.

    He said the union suspended its strike last March following the intervention of some respected personalities.

    The union leader said their demands were for selfish reason, explaining that they were after proper funding of polytechnics.

    He said government’s failure to listen to the union’s demand has left its members with no option than to go on strike.

    The Etsu Nupe, who was represented by the Sheshi Katcha, Alhaji Abdullahi Adamu, promised to take up their grievances.

    He said: “We will be pushing and defending your demands.”

     

  • Poly students demand Wike’s sack

    Poly students demand Wike’s sack

    Activities at the Federal Ministry of Education, Abuja were disrupted yesterday, as the strike by the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) enters the fifth month.

    Students under the aegis of the National Association Nigerian Polytechnic Students (NANPS) protested what they described as the insensitivity of the Federal Government to their plight.

    They demanded the removal of the Supervising Minister for Education, Nyesom Wike, over what they called his inability to resolve the crisis.

    Protesting in front of the Federal Ministry of Education, the students carried placards, such as: “Wike Must Go”, “Government is insensitive”, among others.

    Policemen ensured law and order.

    NANPS’ National President, Comrade Sunday Ogbonnaya, told The Nation that ASUP’s demands had the backing of the students, particularly as it concerned ending the discrimination against HND holders and demanding better funding for the polytechnics.

    “The last meeting between ASUP and the minister was inconclusive. ASUP initially had 13 demands, then it streamlined them into four. Having entered into agreements with the union, it is unfair for the government to fail to yield. We appealed to ASUP at the meeting with the minister that if they were canvassing for what was theirs; they should not use students as negotiation tools in getting what they wanted.

    “A few days after that meeting, ASUP met and said the strike would continue and for reasons, we believe in the struggle of ASUP. We are tired of staying at home. We are in support of the 13 demands of the union and we are ready to support them to make sure that the demands are met. We believe in dialogue. This protest would have been held a long time ago, but we decided to wait. We want them to go back to work while negotiations continue. Let it be known to the public that what they are fighting for is in the interest of the public,” he said.

  • ‘Govt not serious in resolving  ASUP strike’

    ‘Govt not serious in resolving ASUP strike’

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) yesterday accused the President Goodluck Jonathan administration of ‘insensitivity’ towards resolving the over seven months strike.

    ASUP National President, Dr. Chibuzor Asomugha said government was not serious in calling off the strike.

    Speaking in Abuja on a Raypower Radio programme, Political Platform, he vowed that the strike would continue if government did not fulfil its promise.

    Asomugha said after the January 21 meeting with the Supervising Minister for Education, Mr. Nyesom Wike, government promised to get back to the union on further development, adding that nothing had been done.

    Said he: “The insensitivity on the part of government is acute to the point of destroying the system irrevocably. We are saying if government can resolve the four issues it chooses by itself, we can get the system running again.

    “We had made overtures. The next day after the NEC, we conveyed NEC’s decision to government. We expect government to have looked at that matter and if government is serious about the situation, government would have said, okay, now this is your stand on it, come let us talk about it. But government has not said anything.

    “NEC has reviewed the progress we have made so far with government and it has considered that government has not shown enough commitment. Government has not given ASUP anything concrete. The only thing we had to work with was the word of the minister, not supported by any paper or document, not supported by any authorisation.

    “The paper government gave us was a proposal. Government gave us the paper to convey this proposal to our NEC. It wasn’t an affirmation of government’s commitment to pay. We also reminded the minister that the other issues were pending. We asked questions about the issues, which government up till now has refused to address.”

  • ASUP rejects Fed Govt’s N20.4b offer

    ASUP rejects Fed Govt’s N20.4b offer

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) yesterday rejected Federal Government’s N20.4 billion offer accruing from the migration of lower cadre to CONTISS 15 to settle salary arrears.

    The resolution followed ASUP’s National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Abuja.

    The government agreed to give the polytechnics the N20. 4 billion after a meeting on January 21, presided over by the Surprising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike.

    The minister said the money would be paid in instalments. But the union said the government should meet all its demands before the strike would be called off.

    A statement by the union’s National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Clement Chirman, said: “The Academic Stafff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) rose from an emergency NEC meeting today (yesterday) with a strong resolve to continue with the ongoing strike until all the 13-point demands tabled before the Federal Government are addressed.

    “The union reviewed the level of progress so far made on the strike and resolved that most of the issues tabled before the government had not been addressed. The union noted that of the four issues the Federal Government agreed to address in July, not all of them have been addressed. The union stressed that the four issues selected for immediate addressed by the government in July, 2013 do not in any way substitute the 13-point demand earlier tabled but were to take care of the exigencies of that moment and to prepare ways for further discussions on other demands of ASUP.

    “The government’s failure to address those issues at that time indicated enough insincerity and that led to the resumption of the strike in October, 2013. Even if the government had addressed the four issues and failed to attend to the other demand that formed the 13 points by the end of July, 2013, the union would have still resumed the suspended strike.

    “It is unfortunate that the government is making the public to believe that the strike is all about the implementation of CONTISS 15 migration. This is a strategy that is aimed at confusing the demands of the union and to put it in bad light…”

  • ASUP: The forgotten strike

    On January 5, 2006, while in office as President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo approved a policy which reversed the discriminatory restriction of the Higher National Diploma (HND) holders from rising above Level 14 in the civil service. Instructively, it would appear that eight years after, things still remain the way they were in 2014.

    The former Minister of Education, Mrs Chinwe Obaji, and members of the House of Representatives’Committee on Education were present at the meeting where the decision was reached.

    Prior to the policy, there has been this long-drawn battle about which is superior: university degrees or polytechnic diplomas. In the public and private sectors, both are put to the test as employers – wittingly or unwittingly – discriminate against polytechnic graduates. This was what informed the decision – a couple of years ago – of turning some prominent polytechnics in the country into universities.

    In essence, if given the choice, more than 90 per cent of polytechnic students would prefer to be in a university; they only choose polytechnics as an after-thought to escape being home doing nothing.

    This dichotomy is also played on the national scene, and even in the media. The better part of last year was dedicated to the trench warfare between the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Federal Government (FG). Interestingly, too, the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) was on strike before ASUU, but theirs was not given the requisite attention. ASUP had gone on strike on April 17, 2013, more than two months before the ASUU began its own strike on July 1, last year.

    At a point, ASUP suspended its strike – on July 17, 2013 – to prepare grounds for negotiation with the government, only for it to be resumed again. The action entered its seventh month this month.

    And what were the reasons for the strike? It was undertaken to drive home a 12-point demand; this was, however, scaled down to four critical demands after negotiations with the government. The four major demands include: constituting a needs assessment committee for polytechnic education, just like was done for the varsities; the government should inject N20.8billion – as an initial stop gap – into polytechnic education; the government should make concerted efforts at bridging the gap between university graduates and those from the polytechnics; and to address the poor state of state-owned polytechnics.

    While we were all shouting ourselves hoarse over the ASUU strike, we totally “forgot” about the polytechnics, even when ASUP suspended their action to give room for negotiation, the government barely acknowledged the olive branch extended with its nonchalant attitude reflected in its graveyard silence.

    ASUP National President, Chibuzo Asomuhga, in an interview with Vanguard said: “Their (government) thinking that it is only the children of the poor that attend the polytechnics is wrong.” He also pointed out during a press conference that “while the government intervened in other sectors that went on strike or threatened to go on strike, it had ignored the nation’s call for an end to the ongoing strike.” This is the dilemma that polytechnics face in the country.

    Beyond this however, it is quite clear that our polytechnics, just like the universities as well as other levels of education are in crisis. ASUU, which ended a six-month-old strike last December, fought the government on all fronts to meet its demands. It took a lot of pressuring from the public also to get the government to agree to give the universities some money. It is for this reason that calls from certain quarters have hammered on the need to bring the action forcefully to the public domain again.

    After the suspension of its first strike last year, the government agreed to inject N20.8billion to improve the state of polytechnics only to renege, months after the agreement. Yet, we are striving to be counted among developed economies by 2020.

    To put a finger in the dilemma polytechnics and colleges of education face is to understand the psyche of those in government, and Nigerians generally. For instance, in a 2012 interview with Vanguard, Prof Onu Godwin, the Rector, Federal Polytechnic, Oko in Anambra State, said experience in the sector had taught him that more youths prefer gaining admission into universities than polytechnics or colleges of education.

    “Only very few choose polytechnics as their first choice because of some particular courses and this can be attributed to societal values on varsity/polytechnic education. I’m not saying that the university is better than polytechnics or colleges of education, but I think if polytechnics are converted to polytechnic universities, it would solve most of these problems,” he said.

    Provost, Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED), Epe, Lagos State, Prof. Olu Akeusola, also echoed this line recently when he said, “Nigerians will put education institutes in crisis if the discrimination against polytechnics and colleges of education continues.

    “We know how to copy curriculum without implementing same. The theory and concept of the 6-3-3-4 system of education is that after a child has gone through compulsory six years of primary education and three years of junior secondary school, those who are educationally inclined would proceed to senior secondary while those who are not would opt for technical schools. From there, the technical students would proceed to polytechnics while those that went to senior secondary schools would go to universities to further their education.”

    According to Akeusola, the “Post-Unified Matriculation Examination (Post-UME) into institutions of higher learning has compounded the problems because very few candidates would want to put a polytechnic or college of education as their first choice, and the universities don’t have the capacity to admit them all.”

    So, how do we begin to resolve these anomalies? I agree with The Nation editorial of July 16 that we need to revisit “why lecturers in polytechnics and colleges of education cannot go beyond senior lecturers while only in the universities can senior lecturers move to Readers/Associate Professors and finally to Professors. On this important issue, some questions need to be raised and answered. Do the differences in qualities and standards, the mode of appointments and promotion suggest the difference in the qualities of academic staff in the universities and polytechnics and the award of university degrees and polytechnic diplomas?”

    We also need to erase the stereotype and assumption that polytechnics only cater for mechanics and the hospitality industry. In reality, media, arts, design, business, fine arts, film, engineering, and journalism are all available at polytechnics.

    Many parents, teachers, career advisors, and even students do not really understand what polytechnics and independent training do and what they offer. It is almost considered general knowledge that the university is on “a higher level” than polytechnics. But universities are not as “appropriate” for creative fields as society has led everyone to believe. Universities focus primarily upon research; but creative subjects are fundamentally practical. For instance, if you want to learn how to watch a movie go to university, but if you want to make a movie, polytechnics are better suited to your needs.

    To help bridge this stereotype, the government should not be seen to be partial in the drafting and implementation of educational policies. The way things stand, it appears most polytechnics would prefer the transformation of all polytechnics in Nigeria into universities and university campuses. This development, according to this line of reasoning, is considered necessary to correct many of the anomalies that have been bedeviling the successful implementation of Technical Education.

    The reasoning also is that by the time we cease to have polytechnics in Nigeria, most of the problems of non-parity between polytechnic and university lecturers and that between polytechnic students and their university counterparts in terms of difference in rank, certification, status, designation and recognition would be over. Would it really?