Tag: ASUU

  • LAUTECH: ASUU demands  release of report

    LAUTECH: ASUU demands release of report

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbomoso, has called on the two owner-states to release the visitation panel report on the institution.
    This was contained in a statement by its Chairman, Dr Biodun Olaniran.
    ASUU said it was pertinent that the report was released, saying the content would go a long way in affecting their careers at the university.
    The statement said: “Why are the owner-governments hiding the report from the public? Does the report contain facts which both governments are uncomfortable with?
    “Are the governments really interested in the panel’s report or they just put it in place to create impression that the LAUTECH issue was being attended to at that time.’’
    It insisted that the contents of the report be made available before the strike was reviewed, querying that “which union worth its salt will walk blindfolded into an uncertain future without demanding to know the details of a document that will dictate its future”.
    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the owner-states, Oyo and Osun, had on October 19, last year set up a visitation panel headed by Wole Olanipekun (SAN).
    the management had announced the re-opening of the institution on Jan. 27 after eight months of protracted crisis.
    ASUU, however, had refused to resume academic activities on the grounds that it would ensure that future funding of the institution by the owner states was guaranteed.

  • LAUTECH: ASUU lists conditions for resumption

    LAUTECH: ASUU lists conditions for resumption

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH) Ogbomoso, yesterday gave conditions for ending the industrial action in the institution.
    The Chairman, Biodun Olaniran, said meeting the conditions would end the crisis.
    The management had announced Friday for re-opening after it had been shut for eight months.
    But ASUU rejected the resumption date, declaring that it had not called off its industrial action which began on September 19, last year.
    Olaniran said though the school had resumed, academic activities were yet to begin.
    He said the impasse could be resolved through transparent commitment, urging government to demonstrate honesty of purpose.
    Olaniran urged the government to clearly state a plan of sustainable funding pattern or framework for the university.
    “Government should provide an agreeable plan of defraying the outstanding N7.1 billion to the university.
    “It should issue a clear commitment to the settlement of arrears of sundry allowances accumulated over the years,’’ he said.
    The ASUU chairman stated that refusal to pragmatically and honestly address the demands could deepen the crises.
    “Salary is not the real issue. Our major demand borders mostly on the funding of the institution.
    “Internally Generated Revenue can never be a substitute to the funding of the university,’’ he said.

  • ASUU sanctions UNILORIN for ‘lawlessness’

    ASUU sanctions UNILORIN for ‘lawlessness’

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has sanctioned University of Ilorin (Unilorin) and directed its members to boycott academic and allied activities at the school.

    ASUU wielded the big stick following what it described as “Unilorin management’s persistent lawless, arbitrariness, violation of human and trade union rights and persecution of loyal members”.

    No academic staff of the university will be allowed to carry out any academic activity in any other university.

    This was part of resolutions reached at the end of its National Executive Council meeting in Awka. A copy of the sanctions was made available to reporters in Ibadan by Chairman of the University of Ibadan Chapter, Dr Deji Omole.

    The union noted that despite efforts at resolving the crisis in the institution, the management and its sponsored groups were fuelling the crisis, alleging that it forcefully deducts check-off dues without remitting same to the national body.

    Omole added that the union also directed its members to boycott all Unilorin-based journals, quarterlies, newsletters, while articles from academic staff of the university will not be accepted by journals for peer review and/or publication in other universities.

    He said: “Despite ASUU’s intervention, since 2001, the University of Ilorin administration has persisted in acts of lawlessness, arbitrariness, violation of human and trade union rights, and persecution of loyal members.

    “Contrary to the law and despite the ruling of the National Industrial Court, the university has continued to prevent ASUU from functioning on its campus. It has also continued to forcefully collect check-off money from its academic staff without remitting it to the union.

    “The union is, therefore, bound to protect the principles of democracy and the exercise of freedom in the academia, and also insist on the right to function through its own accredited representatives.

    “NEC, at its meeting at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, recognised distinct groups that have emerged in creating and prolonging the crisis at unilorin.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, academic staff of the university shall not participate in any academic activities of other public universities and vice versa.

    “All members of the union, including those serving in private universities during the period of the sanction, shall comply,” he added.

  • Buhari, Saraki, Dogara, ASUU mourn

    Buhari, Saraki, Dogara, ASUU mourn

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday condemned the terrorist attack.
    In a statement by Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, the president expressed sympathy and heartfelt condolences to the University Community, families of the victims and the government and people of Borno State.
    He said the appalling attack on a revered place of worship and Ivory Tower showed that the perpetrators have no true understanding of Islam.
    He said their despicable acts of terrorism are cowardly, criminal, unjustifiable and punishable before God and the laws of the land.
    He reassured communities in Borno and others in the Northeast that his administration would continue to ensure that terrorism never triumphs over peace-loving Nigerians.
    He reaffirmed the need for Nigerians to remain more vigilant even as the security agencies continue to use all means at their disposal to combat the remnants of insurgents and their sponsors.
    Buhari also wished those injured in the attack a speedy and full recovery, and comfort for families of the dead.
    House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara described the bomb attack as the height of wickedness.
    He urged the military not to he deterred in its efforts to rid the country of terrorism, however wondered how learning institution could be target of the degraded insurgents.
    A statement by Dogara’s Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs, Turaki Hassan said: “Describing the sad incident, which occurred at a mosque in the university’s staff quarters during today’s early morning prayers, as the height of wickedness, barbarism, callousness and ungodliness, the Speaker lamented that in spite of the military feat which dislodged the terrorists from their enclave, the insurgents could still find the audacity to carry out such a dastardly act on the University campus.
    “Noting the latest bomb attack as yet another evil dimension taken by the terrorists, the Speaker urged the Nigerian security operatives not to be deterred by the new tactics of the terrorists but to step up their operations as to consolidate on the gains so far made in the fight against terrorism”.
    Senate President, Bukola Saraki on Monday said that the sporadic attacks of the Boko Haram sect is a desperate attempt and a farce as the Nigeria Army have already succeeded in the fight against terrorism.
    He said that like drowning men trying to stay afloat, the Boko Haram terrorists are trying to scare Nigerians whereas they have been defeated adding that their tactics will not work.
    The Senate President spoke in Minna after he led a delegation from the Senate on a condolence visit to the family of Late former Governor of Niger state, Engineer Abdulkadir Kure.
    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), expressed shock over the early bomb blast The union suspended a news conference it had planned to hold after its National Executive Council meeting in Kano.
    ASUU National President Prof Abiodun Ogunyemi, announced the suspension of the news conference in Kano..
    He said that following the bomb blast, the executive council of the union had no alternative than to suspend the conference until it gets the details of what happened.
    “We don’t have the state of mind to do what we want to do today.
    “We are upset with unfortunate development in Maiduguri.
    “We learnt that four people including a professor lost their lives while six others sustained injuries,”Ogunyemi said.

  • UNIMAID blast: ASUU mourns slain professor, postpones press conference

    The leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU)  has cancelled a crucial press conference, scheduled to hold at Union  Secretariat, Old Campus Bayero University Kano (BUK) to mourn Professor Kabiru Umar Mani, who was killed in a bomb blast at a Mosque in University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) on Monday morning. 
     
    ASUU National president, Professor Abiodun Ogunyemi, who was already set to address the press, suspended the event  in sympathy of their colleague, Professor Mani, Head of Veterinary Medicine, University of Maiduguri.
     
    Prior to deferring the press conference, he disclosed that ASUU leadership had been in Kano for four days, deliberating on the Nigerian project and Nigerian Universities.
     
    He said  news of the death of the  Professor, who was  killed  in a bomb blast, alongside four others in a Mosque at UNIMAID, informed the decision of ASUU leadership to shelve the press briefing as a sign of respect for their deceased member.
     
    ”We got disenchanted over the sad development and we felt that it is going to be a sign of insensitivity to go ahead with the Press conference.”
     
    Thereafter, the National president  apologised to newsmen, who converged at ASUU Secretariat for the emergency press briefing, assuring that it would be held soon at another venue, which would be communicated to newsmen.
     
     
  • ASUU, Fed Govt and endless renegotiations

    ASUU, Fed Govt and endless renegotiations

    FORGIVE the pessimism, but there will be no end to dithering over education in Nigeria. The merry-go-round simply won’t stop. Those saddled with the responsibility of managing Nigeria’s education system have for decades shown neither the depth of understanding needed to make it work even at the rudimentary level nor the vision required to make it great, effective, productive or transcendental. This, like every other thing about Nigeria, is a peculiarly Nigerian mystery. Last week, after much pestering, including a one-week warning strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in November last year, the federal government has finally conceded to another effete round of renegotiating the 2009 Fed Govt/ASUU agreement.
    For a federal government enamoured of reaching agreements it never hoped to keep, it is not so amazing that they have become both used to embarking on negotiations and inured to honouring agreements. The usual style is that after bellyaching over certain key provisions of the agreements, the government, half-winded and half-awake, eventually agrees to sign. The ASUU, which has become in one breath a glutton for punishment, and in another breath an incurable optimist, also eventually pens the agreements half-convinced that the serial truce breaker it had just negotiated with had no cat in hell’s chance of honouring anything, let alone a rigorous agreement requiring commitment and a huge budgetary outlay.
    Consider the following. The 2001 agreement between ASUU and the federal government was more honoured in the breach than in the observance. It was, therefore, largely adapted in 2009 after two years of onerous and enervating negotiations and nearly an academic session of strike. Four years later, it was obvious that the government was either inattentive to the agreement it freely reached or it was entirely disinterested in what it gave the impression was a bothersome educational headache. Six months of strike thus followed in 2013, culminating in another round of renegotiation and agreement in December of that year. Alas, even that agreement was also dishonoured. To be sure, there were always gestures in the direction of the agreements, with some sops given to the lecturers, but the government has always been evilly careful not to do anything fundamental about education, as if the disagreements provide it a raison d’être.
    If you thought that the pirouette of negotiations and agreements and renegotiations and breaches was all there was to the exasperating malady, you knew little about Nigerian officialdom. In 2009, the teams to the negotiation (ignore the word renegotiation) between ASUU and federal government were led by Bolanle Babalakin as Chairman, Committee of Pro-Chancellors, Gamaliel Onosode as the government’s own chairman of the renegotiation committee, and Ukachukwu Awuzie as president of ASUU. Some eight years down the line, with two Fed Govt/ASUU agreements bruised and battered, the federal government has turned round to make Dr Babalakin the leader of the government team. The muddle and insincerity can’t get much worse than that.
    What was wrong with the 2009 agreement? And what ailed the 2013 redone agreement? It is understood why the government is not tired of negotiations. But why is ASUU enthusiastic about another round of what will likely turn out a wasteful exercise? The answers are simple. The only thing wrong with both the 2009 and 2013 agreements, despite the government squeezing water out of the ASUU stone, is not the agreements per se but the government’s claim that the kind of money needed to implement them was simply not available. The huge emoluments and allowances of public officials and their aides do not corroborate the government’s argument. As for ASUU, the only explanation for its enthusiasm is that it has since reconciled itself to eking out small gains from unlimited and often protracted negotiations. If snail walk is all it takes to make progress, it thinks, by all means, so be it.
    The substance of the disagreement is plain enough for all to see. Education in Nigeria is in a shambles, completely broken down. To remedy the dire situation, ASUU has among other demands asked for government to progressively raise budgetary allocations to education from the piddling figures of today to some 26 percent of the budget; allocate half of that to the universities, including compelling states to make reasonable increases in their own allocations to state universities; and incentivise lecturers by paying them earned academic allowance now estimated to be about N128bn, among other very crucial demands. The government has on its own responded by leaving untouched virtually all the maladies afflicting the universities, polytechnics and colleges of education and instead preferred to set up new ones. It is true that less than a quarter of those qualified for admission to universities or polytechnics find placement in the few tertiary institutions available, but why add to the morass?
    The new 16-man committee constituted to examine the 2009 agreement afresh gives the government and ASUU some hope that something agreeable to all stakeholders would be fashioned out. Nigerians will hope that everyone can be spared another needless break in the academic calendar, with students in particular desperate to graduate no matter how deplorable the quality of their degrees and diplomas. Cynics who distrust government motive will tune off naturally and expect the worst. The government will hope that the 2009 agreement can be reconfigured by a chastened negotiation team to conform with the new recessionary realism of the day.
    This column takes a totally different view. It would be pleasantly surprised should the negotiation team break the mould and produce a workable, implementable agreement. In the opinion of this column, that implementable agreement is far-fetched. If the right thing could not be done when the money was available, even when the country had a former member of ASUU, Dr Jonathan, at the helm of affairs, it is unrealistic to expect anything better when the Education minister, given his action over the 13 new varsities whose vice chancellors were summarily sacked, and President Muhammadu Buhari, have shown a worrisome lack of depth in tertiary education affairs. Where the Education minister has been fairly narrow-minded, the president has shown a disturbing proclivity for designing and executing programmes in consonance with available funds. He does not envision ambitious educational reforms which should drive a frantic desire to source for funds.
    In short, this column sees the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement as a pointer to the rudimentariness of the government’s education programme. It is a pointer to the president’s lack of education vision, and a far more annoying pointer to the ordinariness of the work going on in the Education ministry. Rather than focusing on renegotiating the 2009 agreement, should the Buhari presidency not have presented a lofty and breathtaking education vision for the country? Should that great vision not show the country what the goals of a revived education sector are, and how the funds necessary to drive the vision would be sourced, and perhaps what roles citizens are expected to play? After almost two years in office, should the government not be telling Nigerians the milestones it hopes to achieve, and how and, more importantly, why Nigerian schools would in the near future outclass those of West Africa and Africa, and thereafter compete favourably with the rest of the world?
    It is of course not expected that ASUU would give up, for to give up is to finally bury education in Nigeria. Indeed, given the number of Nigerian academicians in foreign universities and research institutions, it is an indication that many have lost faith in Nigeria’s education sector. That faith will not be restored with the little amount voted for the sector each year. That faith will not be restored as long as the president has said precious little about where he hopes to take education in the next few years and what he hopes Nigeria can achieve technologically and scientifically with a revived education sector. The Dr Babalakin-led committee will of course hammer out palliatives to secure industrial peace in the universities. But the fundamental change Nigeria needs and the funds to drive it can only come from the president’s vision. Sadly, there is absolutely no indication that such real change is afoot. That kind of change can only come from the inside of the leader, a leader intent on daring great and mighty things, a leader who can see far into the future, not a leader cajoled by restive unions whose perspectives on the subject can sometimes prove too abstract for him.

  • ASUU calls for prosecution of  Agbulu’s killers

    ASUU calls for prosecution of Agbulu’s killers

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has vowed to ensure that the suspected killers of Miss Christiana Agbulu, a lecturer at the Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi, Benue State, are prosecuted.

    Addressing reporters at the weekend in Lokoja, Kogi State capital, Zonal Coordinator of ASUU, Prof. Ukooh David Ikoni, said the suspects should be prosecuted in line with the laws of the land.

    “We are appealing to relevant agencies involved in this case to allow justice so that maximum penalty is applied for the perpetuators,” he said.

    According to him, the death of Miss. Agbulu was painful, not only to the family, but to all who knew her, including the university community.

    He said: “If the government refuses to carry out its functions as demanded by law, the union will insist that they comply with the provision of the law because we would not allow our colleague to die in vain.”

    Miss. Agbulu was buried at her home town in Ugbokolo, Benue State, last Thursday.

     

  • Buhari picks new team to renegotiate FG – ASUU agreement

    Buhari picks new team to renegotiate FG – ASUU agreement

    President Muhammadu Buhari has approved a 14-member Federal Government team to renegotiate the 2009 agreement with unions in federal universities, federal polytechnics and federal colleges of education in order to ensure sustainable peace and industrial harmony in the nation’s tertiary institutions.

    The Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, in a statement issued by the ministry in Abuja on Friday, said the renegotiation team would dialogue with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) and Non Academic Staff Union of Associated & Allied Institutions (NASU).

    The new team is headed by Dr. Wale Babalakin, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN).

    Babalakin, who was adjudged the best pro-chancellor at the time of the negotiations in 2009, headed the agreement implementation committee then.

    The government team comprises the following:

    • Wale Babalakin, SAN; (Chairman)
    • M.M. Jibril, Pro-Chancellor, Federal University, Lafia
    • Nimi Briggs, Pro-Chancellor, Federal University, Lokoja
    • Senator Gbemisola Saraki, Pro-Chancellor, Federal University, Otuoke
    • Lawrence Ngbale, Pro-Chancellor, Federal University, Birnin Kebbi
    • Prince Alex Mbata, Pro-Chancellor, Imo State University, Owerri
    • Olufemi Bamiro, Pro-Chancellor, Tai Solarin University of Education, Ijagun
    • Representatives, Federal Ministry of Education
    • Representative, Federal Ministry of Labour & Employment
    • Representative, Federal Ministry of Finance
    • Representative, Federal Ministry of Justice
    • Representative, Federal Ministry of Budget & National Planning
    • Representative of the National Salaries, Incomes & Wages Commission (NSIWC)
    • Representative of the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF)

    Meanwhile, Buhari has also approved the reconstitution of the governing councils of university of Port Harcourt and Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife, which were dissolved following the recent crises that engulfed the two institutions.

    The new governing councils would serve for a term of four years, in the first instance, effective from December 28, 2016.

     

     

     

     

  • ASUU urges Buhari to implement pact in 2017 budget

    ASUU urges Buhari to implement pact in 2017 budget

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure that the agreement his administration reached with the union in 2009 and 2013 are properly captured and implemented in this year’s budget.
    The union said this was the only way the government could avert an industrial crisis in the Education sector this year.
    It also pledged to reposition the nation’s universities and guarantee the future of the children of the poor with access to qualitative education.
    A New Year message yesterday in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, by ASUU’s Chairman at the University of Ibadan (UI), Dr Deji Omole, said the union urged Nigerians to resist any plan by the ruling class to further impoverish them.
    ASUU advised the National Assembly to use its oversight functions to ensure that the budget is properly implemented to avert an industrial crisis in 2017.
    Hoping that 2017 would bring positive changes to the nation, the university system and the poor away from what it called the inconsistent policies of the present administration, ASUU vowed to also defend the rights of the masses and the funding of education.
    The union said government at all levels must now partner researchers in Nigerian universities to develop the country and invest in public education.
    He noted that the children of the rich would not be secured if children of the poor were not denied of their fundamental human rights to education, good health and basic amenities.
    Omole further stated that adequate funding of public education would play a major part in reducing crime and criminality in the society.

  • Revisiting Senate, ASUU resolutions

    Revisiting Senate, ASUU resolutions

    The three day warning strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in September 2016 may have come and gone.

    Issues arising from the 2009 Federal Government, ASUU agreement and the 2013 Memorandum of Understanding were placed on the front burner by the Senate with the aim of averting a full blown ASUU strike.

    Any lover of education in the country must be troubled by the lingering crisis in the university system.

    The Senate largely succeeded. ASUU suspended its planned full blown strike.

    If feelers from the universities are anything to go by, revisiting the Senate initiated meeting with ASUU and resolutions reached at the meeting may be necessary.

    The resolutions appear to be weighty and likely to go a long way in addressing critical issues in federal government, ASUU relationship if faithfully implemented by both sides in the dispute.

    At the instance of the Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, meetings were held to resolve the issues for which ASUU embarked on a one week warning strike.

    The meetings were attended by representatives of the Federal Ministries of Education, Finance and Labour and Employment, the Senate Committee on Tertiary Education and TETFUND, representatives of the Budget Office, Salaries and Wages Commission, National Universities Commission (NUC) and PENCOM.

    Apart from Chairman, Senate Committee on Tertiary Education, Senator Barau Jibrin, Saraki participated in some of the meetings apparently to give fillip to the discussions.

    Funding for revitalization of public universities, payment of Earned Academic Allowances, registration of NUPEMCO, shortfalls in gap remittance, leading to payment of fraction of salaries to staff of universities and payment of salaries of staff of university primary schools, were some of the subjects of discussion.

    Budgetary allocation to education, exemption of universities from Treasury Single Account (TSA) and renegotiation of the 2009 agreement, were also discussed.

    On funding for revitalization of public universities, the Senate Committee gave a report that N80 billion, out of the N200 billion released in 2013 had remained unspent. The government interpreted the inability of the universities to utilize the fund as evidence of lack of capacity on the part of the universities to absorb the fund.

    ASUU, on its part argued that the guideline set by the Needs Assessment Intervention Fund Implementation Monitoring Committee (IMC) stipulates that any university that meets the conditions shall be given the next tranche and should not be held down by those who failed to do the right thing.

    The union further held the government had deviated from the original idea of quarterly release of N55billion that would be ‘ring-fenced’ for the purpose of massive injection of funds to reposition Nigerian universities for global competition.

    The meeting resolved that the provision on revitalization in the 2009 agreement, as amplified in the FGN/ASUU MoU of 2013, shall be implemented. The meeting also agreed that steps should be taken immediately to remove all impediments to allow universities access the available fund as soon as they meet the conditions while government would look for additional money to replenish the revitalization fund in line with the 2013 MoU.

    On the thorny issue of payment for earned academic allowances, there was no agreement on it according a document.

    The Senate committee reported that the position of the government was that there would be no further release of fund to the universities until the forensic auditing, which was yet to begin, of the disbursement of N30 billion paid in 2013, was completed.

    To assuage the feelings of ASUU, Education Minister was said to have offered to pay N1billion monthly for next six months, during which time the forensic audit was expected to be completed.

    ASSU, on its part, insisted on a framework for paying any part of the arrears of Earned Academic Allowance.

    The union was said to have at first insisted on payment of the entire arrears for four years, but subsequently offered to accept the balance of the arrears of 2009 and 2010 of the EAA, amounting to a total of N23 billion.

    The Senate committee proposed to persuade the executive arm of government on payment of N1.5 billion per month pending the conclusion of the forensic audit.

    The ASSU team was said to have insisted on payment of arrears for two years. After much pressure, the ASUU leadership was said to have promised to report to its membership and report back to the committee.

    On the shortfall in salaries leading to payment of fractions of salaries, the Senate Committee agreed to liaise with the executive arm of government to facilitate averment of fund to address the issue.

    Another prickly issue was payment of salaries of staff on university primary schools. The representatives of the ministries were said to have insisted that the issue is in court. The Senate Committee on it part said that it would be violating Senate rules if it continued to discuss the matter because it is sub-judice.

    The ASUU team, on its part was said to have reiterated the fact that the union was not in court and the point at issue was the 2009 FGN/ASUU agreement.

    Information was given that it was government that went to court to seek the interpretation of ownership of the university staff schools and that should not be used to scuttle an agreement reached with ASUU.

    On budgetary allocation to education, Senate committee on education promised to ensure that there was substantial increase in percentage allocation to the education sector in the 2017 budget. The committee promised to go as far as 15 percent proposed by ASUU in line with the manifesto of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    On exemption of universities from TSA, the ASUU team was said to have argued for a total exemption of universities from TSA in line with university autonomy.

    However, members of the Senate Committee posited that only endowment funds and research grants, which would not come under public fund, could be exempted from the TSA.

    The committee members hinged their submission on extant laws that require that all public revenue must be paid into the consolidated revenue fund and public expenditures must be appropriated for.

    On renegotiation of the 2009 FGN/ASUU agreement, the Senate Committee asked the Ministry of Education to finalize arrangements for the renegotiation in order to cement existing cordial relationship with ASUU.

    Cordial relationship indeed, you may say.

    Rumbling in the universities over alleged failure by the Federal Government to abide by the terms of the 2009 agreement is growing by the day. The Federal Government may do well by doing the needful. The disruptive nature of ASUU strike must be avoided. It should also be said that agreements are made to be kept.

    That the country is still talking about whether or not to honour some agreements reached in 2009 after an incapacitating ASUU strike speaks volume about the country’s attitude to things that matter.

    There is no gain saying the fact that the Senate saved the country another round of ASUU strike by its prompt intervention. The union may have therefore suspended its planned strike, but it may not be long before the unionists would call out its ever ready members for a struggle to save the soul of the ivory tower.