Tag: ASUU

  • ASUU faults OAU council dissolution

    A visitation committee set up by the National Executive Council (NEC) of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has faulted the dissolution of the Governing Council of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile Ife, Osun State.

    The committee said President Muhammadu Buhari erred when he dissolved the Governing Council of Obafemi Awolowo University and approved the suspension of an already concluded process for the appointment of a new vice-chancellor.

    The actions, it insisted, contravened the ASUU-FGN agreement.

    The committee, which submitted its report to the NEC at a meeting in Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma last weekend, noted that “the Governing Council followed the process of selection of Vice Chancellor to its conclusion”.

    It recommended condemnation of the action of Buhari, who is the Visitor to the institution, stating that it violated the Universities Autonomy Act (UAA), which was a product of the agreement reached between the ASUU and the FGN.

    The committee headed by the national vice president of ASUU, Prof. V. E. Osodeke, had eight members, including two zonal coordinators and three immediate past zonal coordinators.

    The committee was set up in the wake of the crisis that rocked the university following the appointment of a new VC.

    The Non-Academic Staff of Universities (NASU) and Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) and some members of ASUU (OAU Branch) had expressed strong displeasure against the process that produced Prof. Ayobami Salami as the 11th VC of the institution.

    They alleged the Prof. Tale Omole’s administration and the Governing Council skewed the process in favour of Salami who was subsequently appointed.

    The union bodies took the matter to the High Court at Osogbo, Osun State and embarked on a strike which led to the closure of the university for weeks.

    A faction within the OAU branch of ASUU headed by Prof. Peter Akinola sided with the two non-academic unions.

    It wrote a petition to the national body, claiming certain wrongdoings against the branch executives.

    But a High Court at Osogbo struck out the case filed by NASU and SSANU challenging the appointment of Salami as VC.

    In his verdict, Justice M. A. Onyetenu stated that the court did not have jurisdiction to entertain the case.

    He asked the appellants to take the case to the Industrial Court at Ibadan, Oyo State.

    Buhari, on July 1, in an advertorial published in a national daily announced dissolution of the Governing Council of the University.

    He also ordered that the process for the appointment of a new VC to replace Prof. Omole be suspended “pending the outcome of the subsisting court case”.

    This was after the appointment process had been concluded with Salami announced as the new VC.

    In August, following the instruction of the Visitor, the Senate of the University met and appointed Prof. Anthony Elujoba as VC in acting capacity.

  • Ondo varsity reopens as ASUU suspends strike

    The Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA), Ondo State chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has suspended its three-month strike, following an agreement with the school management.

    The lecturers declared an indefinite strike last July over the failure of the government to pay their outstanding salaries.

    In a statement by the ASUU Chairman, Dr Sola Fayose, after an emergency meeting, the union said it resolved to suspend the strike after the government paid part of the arrears and signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on the outstanding.

    Fayose said the union expected the management and the Governing Council to abide by the MoU to avoid further action.

    The university management advised students to resume for completion of the second semester.

    A statement by the Registrar, Mr Sunday Ayeerun, urged students to resume as lectures would start immediately.

    The campus became lively again, as students returned in droves. The  suspension of the strike was greeted with excitement. Traders, artisans, commercial motorcyclists and mini-bus drivers, who are mostly patronised by students, expressed relief, saying the community was  comatose when the school was shut.

    Students’ Union Government (SUG) President Adegbola Odunyemi said: “We are happy about the news. Although the effects of the strike on students are unquantifiable, we thank God that we are back to complete the 2015/2016 academic session.

    “We want both ASUU and management to look for other means of settling their differences, rather than embarking on strike. The state government should also improve on its subvention to the university. Recession notwithstanding, the government should commit itself to funding the school so that it will be able to meet up with its statutory obligations.”

  • ASUU flays Fed Govt’s economic, education policies

    ASUU flays Fed Govt’s economic, education policies

    THE Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) said yesterday that the economic and education policies of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration was impacting negatively on the people.

    It urged the citizenry to reject what it called policies pauperising the people and consolidating gains of the ruling class.

    ASUU said the key to revitalising the  ailing economy was investing in people through improvement in infrastructure and injection of funds through channels that would not be manipulated by state and local government administrators.

    ASUU’s National President Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, who addressed a news conference in Abuja, described as monumental fraud the call for sale of national assets.

    He said operators of the economy must be held responsible by the people.

    “The Nigerian social and economic climate has become depressingly hostile to our people, particularly in the last few months. The origin of this lies in the gradual weakening of the values and strength of our polity through imposition of policies, which pauperise our people financially, educationally and psychologically.

    “The proponents of these policies, majorly the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and other collaborators within and outside the country remain relentless in driving the bitter pill down the throat of our people. This has continued to traumatised the Nigerian people to the level that an ominous despondency now pervades the nooks and crannies of the country,” the union said.

    Prof Ogunyemi added that “the enthusiasm that greeted the entry of the current democratic dispensation is gradually giving way to the realism that we may be losing the war to rescue our people from the ruling class extortionist agenda.”

    According to him, in close to 20 million children of primary school age, only about 1.5 million, 7.5 per cent, are in school.

    Only about eight million of the close to 30 million children of secondary school age, representing about 27 per cent, are in school, Prof. Ogunyemi added.

    He said: “We are convinced, as ever, that there would be no meaningful change in this country until and unless our governments are prepared for revolution in education.

    “Privatisation and commercialisation of education and other sectors, sold to them by IMF and World Bank, will only take education beyond the reach of ordinary Nigerians. What Nigeria needs, instead, is commitment to mass, functional and qualitative education. That is what we need to develop a nation.

    He said the union would resist attempts by the Senate to amend the act establishing the Joint Admission and Matriculations Board (JAMB) in a way that contradicts the existing law of university senate in admission of students.

    He warned the Senate to desist from carrying on with the amendment without scientific knowledge of the problems and adequate knowledge in what actually constitute the university admission process.

     

     

     

  • NUT, ASUU, WAEC, others: why education standard is poor

    NUT, ASUU, WAEC, others: why education standard is poor

    Stakeholders are not happy with the state of education, 56 years after the country’s Independence. They blame the government for what they call the neglect of ‘this critical sector’. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA, OLUWATOYIN ADELEYE and MOJISOLA CLEMENT-OMOBOWALE report:

    After 56 years of Independence, how has education fared in Nigeria? Not well, say stakeholders in their assessment of the sector. Reason: poor funding, dearth of infrastructure and policy that can deepen the sectors growth. The government, the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) argued, should be blamed for the sector’s poor performance.

    ‘Successive governments, it said, failed to put education on the front burner.

    A statement by WAEC’s Head, Public Affairs, Demianus Ojijeogu said: “In recent years, the total neglect of education by successive governments both at the federal and state levels, became so obvious that it was staring us in the face. Several warnings from those that should know where we are headed in terms of education went unheeded.

    “The infrastructure was not there. And where it was, it was in a decayed state. One of the indices for national development is education. But we went on, as a nation, for a very long time pretending that nothing was wrong. That led to the emergence of private schools. Later, our children started looking towards Ghana, South Africa and even Togo and Benin Republic for quality education. And we had one strike too many.”

    It continued:  “At a time, due to the poor performance of candidates in our examinations, there was pressure on the council to lower its standards. But having been conducting examinations for more than 60 years now, we knew the solution does not lie in awarding high grades to undeserving candidates. And that was why we wrote to all the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, urging them that we can partner with them to train their teachers and also avail them with our numerous resources and materials that will help them raise students with intellectual capability.

    “Education is more than writing examinations. The conducive environment required for teaching and learning to take place should be created.  Adequate remuneration for teachers should be paramount. Laboratories and libraries should be equipped. Parents should be vitally involved in the education of their children. Paying their school fees won’t be enough. The society should also reward students that did well in WASSCE by instituting awards like they do for Project Fame and others.”

    To the Academic Staff Unions of Universities (ASUU), there is no difference in the present government’s approach to public universities with those of past administrations.

    It said the trend could not be allowed to continue because the common man’s future lies in public education.

    ASUU National President Prof Abiodun Ogunyemi recalled that at independence in 1960, the nationalists conceptualised education as a springboard for development. He said up to 40 per cent of the budget was earmarked for education, thereby paving the way for the establishment of first generation universities such as, the University of Lagos; University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University); and University of Nigeria Nssuka (UNN).

    The trend, Ogunyemi noted, continued in the Second Republic with the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and the late Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, among others, championing quality education.

    Things, he said, began to change from former head of State, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo’s era. Some Nigerians, Ogunyemi said, then  saw education as their private property and began  a gradual commercialisation of the sector. Education nosedived from then on through the Buhari-Idiagbon regime, and up to former Gen Ibrahim Babangida’s eight-year rule.

    Ogunyemi said: “Today, you see the proliferation of private schools everywhere. They first began with primary and secondary schools and they are now some of the biggest investors in private universities.

    “By 1985, these people started rolling back government support for public education. By the time Obasanjo took over as civilian president in 1999, some politicians now saw public schools as their private properties.

    “ASUU has fiercely resisted this to date, but for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank that will not let go because they are the forces of neo-liberalism.

    “ASUU believes it is public education that will give Nigerians a sense of patriotism. So, if government is saying it has no business in public education, what they are saying is that individuals should fund themselves to acquire education anywhere.

    “So, if my parent has to steal to send me abroad, that means once I graduate, my brain will be for the highest bidder rather than saying I want to come back and use the same brain to develop my fatherland.”

    The National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) makes a case for standard in the sector. Education, it said,  began a downward slope when the military came into power in 1966.

    “Our leaders have gotten education wrong right from the military coup of 1966 when attention was redirected from education to other areas,” NAPPS National Vice President Chief Yomi Otubela said, adding: “Government at all levels should be able to set a standard for education for private individuals to follow. Failure to do this has brought in mushroom schools, unqualified teachers, and proprietors who have come into education for material gain and not passion. There is no will-power by the government to clampdown on these low standard schools, because even many public schools are mushroom schools.”

    The group continued: “Teachers’ motivation is so low and teaching schools are not standardised. The Nigerian Certificate in Education (NCE) is not motivating teachers, so this has led to half-baked teachers and graduates who cannot defend their certificates.”

    NAPPS blamed it all on erosion of values, saying: “The crave for materialism and show of wealth by those in authority have led to a decay in our values in Africa. Parents no longer prioritise their children’s education so they keep them at home, use them to make money, or they just send them to mushroom schools where they would not get quality education.”

    To enable it assist the sector, the Committee of Vice Chancellors and Registrars of Private Universities in Nigeria (CVCRTU) is appealing for single digit or interest-free loans. It also appealed for access to  research funds and soft loans or scholarship for students.

    Speaking with The Nation the association’s Chairman, Prof Debo Adeyemo said private universities,  were major stakeholders that deserve more financial attention from the government.

    Adeyemo said no private university could claim to be making profit, as a lot of investment went into acquiring infrastructure and maintaining students.

    He said: “We need access to funding as this will allow us have the ambience of an ecosystem to commensurates with that kind of atmosphere conducive for learning and research in universities.

    “There are secondary schools that charge three times what we charge in private universities; yet nobody bates an eyelid. It is government that creates this impression that private school charges are high.

    “In my school (Redeemer University) for instance, each hostel room is shared by two students which is quite expensive to run. But government will charge N90 per person in public school making some parents to now view what we charge as quite high.

    “Now tell me, what can N90 achieve with respect to students accommodation? That is why we see students overcrowding unkempt hostels across many public institutions nationwide.

    “We also want government to open research funding opportunity for us. It is ridiculous when people say because we are private universities, we cannot enjoy government funding. Go to America, universities there, regardless of whether public or private, have unfettered access to research funding. Any research from our engagement will be profitable to both the nation and the world.

    “In all, I think government should simply remove encumbrances to  the growth of private universities. We believe in quality and we should allow quality in our ivory towers if we must compete globally.”

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) berated the government for what it called the poor  funding of polytechnics.

    Its President, Yussuf Dutse Usman, decried the absence of governing councils in federal polytechnics for about 18 months, saying the development has slowed down policy implementation.

    “Generally for us, the performance of government has not been in anyway impressive as there is no significant improvement in funding,” Usman said.

    “Government has not yet fulfilled the agreement it signed with us in 2006 for the overall welfare of polytechnics.  Also many of our colleagues at the state level are being owed salary arrears and this is affecting their performance. We at federal institutions are facing similar challenges as our salaries are not adequate because of what government calls a shortfall,” he added.

    “For about a year and a half now, governing council of federal institutions nationwide have not been in place. This is our greatest headache as most decisions, which could have been taken for the smooth running of administration are being delayed. We are using this opportunity to appeal to the government to reconstitute the governing councils as quickly as possible,” he said.

    The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), urged the government to invite the stakeholders for talks on  changing the education curriculum to meet current economic demands.

    “This (economic) recession is not only affecting our members, but all Nigerians,” said NUT National President Michael Alogba Olukoya.

    He added: “We need to sit down (with government), discuss economic diversification and also change our curriculum to meet the enormity of the economic demands in our country.”

  • Don to ASUU: curb resort to strikes

    Former Executive Secretary, National Commission for Colleges of Education, Prof. Peter Lassa, has appealed to the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to  reduce the use of strikes in pressing its demands in the universities.

    Lassa, a professor of Mathematics, spoke to reporters in Abuja on the ‘Sorry state of education in Nigeria’

    “ASUU needs to reduce strike actions. They should strike only when the issues are serious,” he said.

    Lassa, who noted that the level of basic education had fallen, added that the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) is not doing enough to tackle it.

    “The UBEC is not meeting the goal that is intended. There is no infrastructure in schools. And the low quality of teachers in the country is worrisome,” he said.

    He also said politics between states and Federal Government was hampering the quality of education in the country.

    “The policy by the government should be laid down clear. Unilateral decision is creating problems for Nigeria’s education. Why should state governments establish universities when there is no basic education in their state?” he asked.

    Lassa called for academic and administrative autonomies for universities.

     

  • NUT, ASUU, WAEC, others: why education standard is poor

    NUT, ASUU, WAEC, others: why education standard is poor

    Stakeholders are not happy with the state of education, 56 years after the country’s Independence. They blame the government for what they call the neglect of ‘this critical sector’. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA, OLUWATOYIN ADELEYE and MOJISOLA CL

    After 56 years of Independence, how has education fared in Nigeria? Not well, say stakeholders in their assessment of the sector. Reason: poor funding, dearth of infrastructure and policy that can deepen the sectors growth. The government, the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) argued, should be blamed for the sector’s poor performance.

    ‘Successive governments, it said, failed to put education on the front burner.

    A statement by WAEC’s Head, Public Affairs, Demianus Ojijeogu said: “In recent years, the total neglect of education by successive governments both at the federal and state levels, became so obvious that it was staring us in the face. Several warnings from those that should know where we are headed in terms of education went unheeded.

    “The infrastructure was not there. And where it was, it was in a decayed state. One of the indices for national development is education. But we went on, as a nation, for a very long time pretending that nothing was wrong. That led to the emergence of private schools. Later, our children started looking towards Ghana, South Africa and even Togo and Benin Republic for quality education. And we had one strike too many.”

    It continued:  “At a time, due to the poor performance of candidates in our examinations, there was pressure on the council to lower its standards. But having been conducting examinations for more than 60 years now, we knew the solution does not lie in awarding high grades to undeserving candidates. And that was why we wrote to all the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, urging them that we can partner with them to train their teachers and also avail them with our numerous resources and materials that will help them raise students with intellectual capability.

    “Education is more than writing examinations. The conducive environment required for teaching and learning to take place should be created.  Adequate remuneration for teachers should be paramount. Laboratories and libraries should be equipped. Parents should be vitally involved in the education of their children. Paying their school fees won’t be enough. The society should also reward students that did well in WASSCE by instituting awards like they do for Project Fame and others.”

    To the Academic Staff Unions of Universities (ASUU), there is no difference in the present government’s approach to public universities with those of past administrations.

    It said the trend could not be allowed to continue because the common man’s future lies in public education.

    ASUU National President Prof Abiodun Ogunyemi recalled that at independence in 1960, the nationalists conceptualised education as a springboard for development. He said up to 40 per cent of the budget was earmarked for education, thereby paving the way for the establishment of first generation universities such as, the University of Lagos; University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University); and University of Nigeria Nssuka (UNN).

    The trend, Ogunyemi noted, continued in the Second Republic with the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and the late Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, among others, championing quality education.

    Things, he said, began to change from former head of State, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo’s era. Some Nigerians, Ogunyemi said, then  saw education as their private property and began  a gradual commercialisation of the sector. Education nosedived from then on through the Buhari-Idiagbon regime, and up to former Gen Ibrahim Babangida’s eight-year rule.

    Ogunyemi said: “Today, you see the proliferation of private schools everywhere. They first began with primary and secondary schools and they are now some of the biggest investors in private universities.

    “By 1985, these people started rolling back government support for public education. By the time Obasanjo took over as civilian president in 1999, some politicians now saw public schools as their private properties.

    “ASUU has fiercely resisted this to date, but for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank that will not let go because they are the forces of neo-liberalism.

    “ASUU believes it is public education that will give Nigerians a sense of patriotism. So, if government is saying it has no business in public education, what they are saying is that individuals should fund themselves to acquire education anywhere.

    “So, if my parent has to steal to send me abroad, that means once I graduate, my brain will be for the highest bidder rather than saying I want to come back and use the same brain to develop my fatherland.”

    The National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) makes a case for standard in the sector. Education, it said,  began a downward slope when the military came into power in 1966.

    “Our leaders have gotten education wrong right from the military coup of 1966 when attention was redirected from education to other areas,” NAPPS National Vice President Chief Yomi Otubela said, adding: “Government at all levels should be able to set a standard for education for private individuals to follow. Failure to do this has brought in mushroom schools, unqualified teachers, and proprietors who have come into education for material gain and not passion. There is no will-power by the government to clampdown on these low standard schools, because even many public schools are mushroom schools.”

    The group continued: “Teachers’ motivation is so low and teaching schools are not standardised. The Nigerian Certificate in Education (NCE) is not motivating teachers, so this has led to half-baked teachers and graduates who cannot defend their certificates.”

    NAPPS blamed it all on erosion of values, saying: “The crave for materialism and show of wealth by those in authority have led to a decay in our values in Africa. Parents no longer prioritise their children’s education so they keep them at home, use them to make money, or they just send them to mushroom schools where they would not get quality education.”

    To enable it assist the sector, the Committee of Vice Chancellors and Registrars of Private Universities in Nigeria (CVCRTU) is appealing for single digit or interest-free loans. It also appealed for access to  research funds and soft loans or scholarship for students.

    Speaking with The Nation the association’s Chairman, Prof Debo Adeyemo said private universities,  were major stakeholders that deserve more financial attention from the government.

    Adeyemo said no private university could claim to be making profit, as a lot of investment went into acquiring infrastructure and maintaining students.

    He said: “We need access to funding as this will allow us have the ambience of an ecosystem to commensurates with that kind of atmosphere conducive for learning and research in universities.

    “There are secondary schools that charge three times what we charge in private universities; yet nobody bates an eyelid. It is government that creates this impression that private school charges are high.

    “In my school (Redeemer University) for instance, each hostel room is shared by two students which is quite expensive to run. But government will charge N90 per person in public school making some parents to now view what we charge as quite high.

    “Now tell me, what can N90 achieve with respect to students accommodation? That is why we see students overcrowding unkempt hostels across many public institutions nationwide.

    “We also want government to open research funding opportunity for us. It is ridiculous when people say because we are private universities, we cannot enjoy government funding. Go to America, universities there, regardless of whether public or private, have unfettered access to research funding. Any research from our engagement will be profitable to both the nation and the world.

    “In all, I think government should simply remove encumbrances to  the growth of private universities. We believe in quality and we should allow quality in our ivory towers if we must compete globally.”

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) berated the government for what it called the poor  funding of polytechnics.

    Its President, Yussuf Dutse Usman, decried the absence of governing councils in federal polytechnics for about 18 months, saying the development has slowed down policy implementation.

    “Generally for us, the performance of government has not been in anyway impressive as there is no significant improvement in funding,” Usman said.

    “Government has not yet fulfilled the agreement it signed with us in 2006 for the overall welfare of polytechnics.  Also many of our colleagues at the state level are being owed salary arrears and this is affecting their performance. We at federal institutions are facing similar challenges as our salaries are not adequate because of what government calls a shortfall,” he added.

    “For about a year and a half now, governing council of federal institutions nationwide have not been in place. This is our greatest headache as most decisions, which could have been taken for the smooth running of administration are being delayed. We are using this opportunity to appeal to the government to reconstitute the governing councils as quickly as possible,” he said.

    The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), urged the government to invite the stakeholders for talks on  changing the education curriculum to meet current economic demands.

    “This (economic) recession is not only affecting our members, but all Nigerians,” said NUT National President Michael Alogba Olukoya.

    He added: “We need to sit down (with government), discuss economic diversification and also change our curriculum to meet the enormity of the economic demands in our country.”

    EMENT-OMOBOWALE report:

  • LAUTECH crisis, a sore thumb – Activists

    A group of human rights activists, Movement for Peace and Development, has warned that the debilitating situation in the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, is a simmering volcano which could in future have an even more devastating effect than a bomb blast, if not sincerely addressed.
    At a media briefing on Friday in Oyo town, Chairman of the group, Comrade Ayekale Olorunyomi, described the institution’s crisis as a “sore thumb sticking out as evidence of our collective shame and hypocritical claim to reform education, governance and the very future of Nigeria by past administrations, which we all profess to love so much.”
    According to him, in view of the fact that LAUTECH was adjudged one of the very best Nigerian universities, its current condition is best described as tragic.

    “One would really need to be heartless not to feel sorry for the poor students who always get the bad end of the stick and whose lives are being mortgaged in installments by the incessant problems bedeviling this hitherto to promising university.

    “One wonders how it is ever so impossible for us in Nigeria to set up and preserve anything of value without allowing ego and personal interest to run the deal.”

    Olorunyomi appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari, the institution’s Chancellor, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, and the two state governors of Oyo and Osun States, as well as the unions to see the current state of LAUTECH as a source of state and national embarrassments, hence the need to proffer urgent solution to the impasse.

    He said, “all such situations in the country deserve urgent attention before our youths are completely drained of every sense of patriotism and national pride. It is immoral and irresponsible for our leaders to invest so much resources and energy in political campaigns and horse trading all over the nation, while our institutions like LAUTECH is left to rot because of non – payment of staff salaries.”

    The Academic Staff Union of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology [LAUTECH], Ogbomoso, are currently on indefinite strike over harsh working environment.

    The institution, according to ASUU Chairman, Dr. Bodunrin Olaniran, is fast losing its seasoned academics due to what the academics referred to as “in conducive and harsh working environment”.

    So far, about six academic staff was reported to have left and without replacement and both the academic and non-academic staff are yet to receive their three months salaries.
    Since 2008, it was reliably gathered that there had been no grants for capital projects, as all on-going physical structures on campus were either NEEDS assessment or TETFUND, thus making it difficult to believe that the varsity is jointly owned by two states’ governments.

    Similarly, all internally generated revenues were being exhausted to augment payment of staff salaries while a sum of N 296 million was being  released monthly for the payment salaries, additional fund of about N84 million was being sourced for by the university management to a wage bill of between N360million and N380 million.

    This salary augmentation is adversely affecting promotion arrears, earned academic allowances, pensions and gratuity, office and laboratory facilities.
    Also, for the pat twenty-one months, no subvention has been made available to the institution, as Osun State owes eleven months, while Oyo State owes seven months.

    It was further learnt the university last received grants for research and development in 2010, as lecturers spend their personal money to carry out researches.

    The university’s Public Relations Officer, Lekan Fadeyi, said both the management and owner state governments are working round the clock to address the challenges.

  • Reduce your strikes, expert tells ASUU 

    A former Executive Secretary of the National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE), Prof. Peter Lassa, has urged the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to reduce its strike to save the nation’s university education.

    Lassa, who is a professor of Mathematics, addressed reporters in Abuja on what he called The Sorry State of Education in Nigeria. 

    According to him, ASUU should only embark on strikes over serious issues.

    Lassa said: “ASUU needs to reduce the rate of its strikes. It should go on strikes only when the issues are serious.”

    The academic said the standard of basic education had fallen, adding that the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) is not doing enough to tackle it.

    He said: “The UBEC is not meeting the goal that is intended. There is no infrastructure in schools, and the low-quality teachers in the country is worrisome.”

    Lassa also said the politics between states and the Federal Government was hampering the standard of education.

    He said: “The policy by government should be laid down clearly. Unilateral decision is creating problems for Nigeria’s education. Why should state governments establish universities when there is no basic education in their state?”

    The professor called for academic and administrative autonomy among universities.

  • The unending ASUU – Oloyede war

    The unending ASUU – Oloyede war

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) still appears bitter with Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) Registrar Prof Ishaq Oloyede for the sacking of 49 University of Ilorin (Unilorin) teachers in 2001. Oloyede was Unilorin’s deputy vice chancellor (DVC) then. Following his appointment as JAMB Registrar last month, ASUU renewed its war against him. It accused him of nepotism and fraud while he was VC between 2007 and 2012. He denied it all. The university also defended Oloyede, accusing ASUU of bad belle. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA and ADEKUNLE JIMOH (Ilorin) report the intigues surrounding the matter. 

    unilorin-crisi

    Ever before Prof Ishaq Oloyede became Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) Registrar, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) had sworn never to have anything to do with him. Their squabble did not start today. It started over 15 years ago when Oloyede, who was then University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) deputy vice-chancellor (DVC), presided over the panel, which recommended the sacking of 49 teachers.  So, when he was invited to deliver the convocation lecture at the then embattled Lagos State University (LASU) last year, ASUU thwarted the arrangement.

    The ASUU, Oloyede rift dates back over 15 years when he was DVC, and Prof Shuaib Oba Abdulraheem as the Vice Chancellor (VC).

    In 2001, Oba Abdulraheem’s administration sacked 49 teachers for participating in an ASUU strike. Oloyede chaired the panel that recommended the firing of the lecturers led by the then Unilorin ASUU chairman, Dr Taiwo Oloruntoba-Oju. When Oloyede succeeded Oba Abduraheem, ASUU expected him to right the wrongs of the past, but he did not.  Although ASUU suspended the local chapter of the union, Oloyede’s administration was said to have encouraged it.

    The union took Unilorin to court and won at the Supreme Court after a nine-year legal battle. ASUU accused Oloyede’s administration of not “fully” complying with the verdict and declared war against the then VC.

    When Oloyede was appointed JAMB Registrar last month, ASUU renewed its war against him. The union wondered why Oloyede was appointed to head such a sensitive agency despite what it called his anti union and draconian legacies while at Unilorin.

    At a briefing at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUCOM) in Ikeja, the union asked that Oloyede ‘s tenure at Unilorin be probed. The union vowed never to interact with him and not to allow him into any public universities where it has members.

    ASUU National President Prof Biodun Ogunyemi, who addressed reporters at LASUCOM, urged the government to investigate what he described as Oloyede’s tyrannical and nepotism tendencies.

    Said Ogunyemi: “Oloyede took nepotism to unprecedented heights as vice chancellor of Unilorin. The system was manipulated to employ his relatives.

    “In May 2012, Prof Oloyede as VC suddenly doubled the amount of pension being deducted from Unilorin staff under the pretext that deductions were not enough. This was in contravention of the Pension Reform Act which prescribed 7.5 per cent.”

    But, the university management described ASUU’s allegations as “bad belle”, saying it would not dignify the union by responding to those claims. However, the two unions in Unilorin- the suspended ASUU believe to be loyal to management, and the one inaugurated by ASUU national in April, are trading words  over Oloyede’s appointment.

    The faction led by Dr. Usman AbdulRaheem believed to have management’s ears, hailed Oloyede’s appointment as worthy and well deserved. He described ASUU national leadership’s position on Oloyede as “baseless, reckless and ill-conceived”.

    Abdulraheem said ASUU national was disillusioned, asking it to retrace its steps.

    He said: “What ASUU National Executive Committee (NEC) is lamenting is its serial failure to foist unpopular leadership on the branch. Majority of our members had insisted and still insist that ASUU NEC will continue to fail woefully and sulk until it embraces the elementary democratic principles in the election of leadership.

    “We advise the executive of the union to retrace its path to the dreams of our founding fathers- Mahmud Tukur, the late Festus Iyayi and Attahiru Jega and embrace democratic norms and meritocracy.

    “It is yet another evidence of the meddlesomeness of a union (leadership) that has lost track of the laid down objectives of its cherished founding fathers. Otherwise, what kind of reasoning will produce such an outburst over a well and widely acknowledged appointment?

    “The purging of Unilorin of anarchy, academic idiocy and laziness, which the ASUU NEC is grieving over, has yielded positive result in terms of academic productivity, integrity and stable calendar in Unilorin.

    “These have been widely acclaimed and appreciated by Nigerians and non-Nigerians. This feat has become the envy and goal of many higher institutions in Nigeria. Prof I.O. Oloyede’s achievements and antecedents in other areas are iconic, intimidating, as well as outstanding.”

    But the ASUU loyal to the national body kicked against Oloyede’s appointment.

    Its Chairman, Dr Kayode Afolayan, said: “ASUU UNILORIN aligns itself wholly with the statement made by ASUU president on the issue of Prof Oloyede. The branch is in agreement with the union’s publicied opposition to Oloyede’s appointment as JAMB Registrar and for the reasons stated.

    “This is not the first time that allegations of fraud, nepotism and having anti-workers tendencies have been raised against Prof Oloyede from within the University of Ilorin itself. The allegations were raised even while he was VC, but they were always suppressed by the powers that be within the university.

    “To the best of our knowledge, Prof Oloyede has not denied the statements himself. ASUU as a body does not make statements frivolously, so it is necessary that the man should defend himself.

    “Meanwhile, the public should discountenance any earlier statements in support of Prof. Oloyede purportedly made in the name of ASUU UNILORIN. These are persons whose supposed illegal tenure had been annulled by the National Industrial Court (NIC) as far back as 2013. But they have continued to occupy office because the impunity that goes on in Unilorin supports them.

    “The statements were made by pawns that were obviously planted there to perpetually sing the praises of the university administration and do the bidding of the powers that be in the university.”

    Speaking with The Nation on phone, Oloyede insisted that he would not dignify ASUU with a response.

    “I see this as distractions,” he said.

    “See, the man making the allegations have you ever heard his name in academic circles? I don’t allow people who are failures in their respective callings to distract me.

    “I don’t respond to such people. Search for scholars on google, you won’t find his name there. So, I do not respond to academic failures,” he said.

    Defending Oloyede, Unilorin management described ASUU’s allegations as lies, and smacking of envy.

    A statement by the institution’s Deputy Director, Corporate Affairs, Mr Kunle Akogun, said management was shocked that ASUU could be raising such allegations against Oloyede whose appointment has been hailed by people.

    In a statement titled:  “ASUU’s bad belle on Prof. Oloyede’s appointment” Unilorin said: “It is baffling that despite the national applause elicited by the recent appointment of Prof. Ishaq Oloyede as JAMB Registrar any group, can still come out to oppose such highly commendable decision of President Muhammadu Buhari. Of all the appointments made so far by the Buhari administration that of Prof. Oloyede has been singled out as a veritable round peg in a round hole!

    “It is in this regard that the management of the University of Ilorin views the allegations levelled by ASUU against the person of our former vice-chancellor as not only spurious but also irritating, as it smacks of ‘bad belle‘. The allegations are mere tissues of falsehoods aimed at tarnishing the good image Prof. Oloyede has built for himself and the ‘better-by-far’ university. We would, therefore, not dignify the association with any response.

    “Oloyede’s tenure at the University of Ilorin (2007 – 2012) catapulted it to an institutional model for the Nigerian university system. During the period, Unilorin was ranked among the best in Africa. Also, during his tenure as Chairman of the Association of Vice-Chancellors of Nigerian Universities (AVCU), public universities in the country regained their voice and institutional autonomy got a remarkable boost.

    “Prof Oloyede’s trajectory is a study in service excellence, administrative acumen, and religious commitment to the achievement of set goals, and unapologetic insistence on fairness for all.

  • ASUU strike’ll end soon, says AAUA VC

    The Vice Chancellor, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba Akoko, (AAUA) Prof Igbekele Ajibefun, has assured that the on-going industrial action by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in the institution will soon end.

    Ajibefun gave the assurance while speaking with reporters in his office at the weekend.

    The VC said, “Our academic calendar has been very smooth until recently when the university began to face some challenges in terms of payment of salaries, which is not unconnected with the economic recession in the country.

    “Very soon, all the issues will be resolved. We are in a progressive talk with the leadership of ASUU. Efforts are in the top gear to ensure that ASUU members go back to class. Very soon, our students will be asked to return to campus.”

    Reacting to speculations that the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) at AAUA has been proscribed, following a protest by some members of the association, which led to the disengagement of its executives in 2012, Ajibefun said the union was never banned in the university.

    “There is no record whatsoever that says SSANU has been banned. The Management is not against its resuscitation. Everybody has the right to freedom of association and such a right has not been taken away from SSANU,” he said.