Tag: ASUU

  • PDP chieftain begs ASUU to end strike

    PDP chieftain begs ASUU to end strike

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Richard Lamai, has appealed to the striking Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to call off the lingering strike.

    He, expressed disappointment at the protracted strike and the insensitivity with which the future of Nigerian youths was being treated.

    He, however, said ASUU should not see calling off the strike as a mark of weakness but as a demonstration of their patriotism and commitment to better the lot of Nigerian students.

    The National Coordinator of Project Reloaded, made the appeal at the Maitama Headquarters, Abuja.

    He wondered why there seems to be no end to their demands in spite of the federal government’s firm commitment to addressing the problem.

    “As a matter of fact, several well-meaning Nigerians within and outside the country have pleaded with ASUU to reconsider its hard stance on the matter. We all are in agreement that something drastic needs to be done to salvage the education sector. This was what informed the setting up of NEEDS assessment committee by President Goodluck Jonathan which Governor Gabriel Suswam of Benue state was appointed to chair.

     

    “The Nigerian student has suffered enough and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) should sheathe their sword by calling off the strike and partner with the Federal Government to build a sustainable and effective educational system,” he said.

     

  • ASUU, Wike and shifting ultimatum

    Convinced that the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) was being needlessly intransigent and combative in its strike, President Goodluck Jonathan and the supervising minister in the Ministry of Education, Nyesom Wike, have become even more openly bellicose. Would to God they had been bellicose against Stella Oduah’s malfeasances. The latest stalemate began when the leaders of ASUU sought written assurances that the federal government would keep its own side of the bargain. First to meet the university teachers with discourteous outburst was Mr Wike himself, Dr Jonathan’s redoubtable man Friday. There would be no written assurances whatsoever, he shut back in anger, nor any assurances for that matter. The president’s word was good enough, he claimed. Thereupon he launched into the most obscene and fawning rhapsodies of Dr Jonathan’s attributes and the incontestability of presidential powers.

    Dr Jonathan himself, inflamed by his aides’ rhapsodies and sweeping and uncouth denigration of his opponents, summarily and unprecedentedly declared that ASUU had become subversive and a tool in the hands of the opposition. If the presidential hysteria was not embarrassing enough, Mr Wike, still breathing imprecate against the government’s phantom enemies, reviewed the December 4 ultimatum he gave the striking teachers to resume or be sacked. They should now resume work on December 9 or get the boot, he thundered as one completely ignorant of the way universities are run.

    It is sad that a matter about to be resolved has become complicated by the insensitivity of the Jonathan presidency. Could university teachers, as enlightened and diverse as they are, offer themselves to be used by a political party? Is the decay in universities not apparent enough? And had teachers not gone on strike over the years, who could guess how much worse the rot would have been? Clearly the country is in need of being saved from the hands of Dr Jonathan and his fawning aides. If Dr Jonathan is still capable of listening, would former presidents please gently remonstrate with him to stop embarrassing the country he has misled for the past five years or so?

  • War without end

    War without end

    The Federal Government and ASUU must resolve their dispute in Nigeria’s interest

    When the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) declared a nationwide indefinite strike on July 1, 2013, the Nigerian populace knew that it was in for difficult times.

    The strike was caused by the blatant refusal of the Jonathan administration to implement the agreement arrived at between the Federal Government and the union in 2009. Over the intervening four years, ASUU had employed a variety of methods and strategies, including public enlightenment campaigns and warning strikes, none of which appeared to sway government.

    Events followed the usual pattern, with tough talk from both sides, and pleas for moderation from prominent citizens, parents and the university students themselves. In November, a marathon meeting with the union convened by President Goodluck Jonathan seemed to offer glimpses of light at the end of the tunnel. ASUU called a meeting of its executive in Kano to consider the Federal Government’s latest offer. Further progress was tragically halted by the death of Professor Festus Iyayi, a respected former ASUU president, on his way to the talks.

    The union’s grief at Iyayi’s untimely demise was aggravated by education minister Nyesom Wike’s sudden imposition of a deadline for the striking university teachers to return to work by December 4 or be sacked. In the face of the resultant ASUU defiance, the deadline was extended to December 9. Some universities have directed all teaching staff to resume duties in anticipation of reopening.

    It is surprising that the Federal Government would seek to worsen a crisis which it could have avoided with greater flexibility on its own part. Its own inability to adhere to the 2009 agreement is the root cause of the problem. For months, it refused to talk to ASUU, or even acknowledge the justness of its position. Instead of pursuing the apparent breakthrough in negotiations, it suddenly decided to resort to tactics that failed in the past when they were tried by a succession of military administrations. Rather than confront the real issues underpinning the strike, government has chosen to play the partisan card by insisting that ASUU was being used to undermine it.

    Such tactics would be laughable if the situation was not so serious. Regardless of whether one agrees with ASUU or not, there is no doubt that tertiary education in Nigeria is in trouble. Apart from the so-called “crisis of access” in which barely 10 per cent of candidates seeking admission will be successful, there is the steady debilitation of infrastructure which has negatively affected the quality of education on offer. Classrooms are overcrowded, libraries and laboratories are inadequate, accommodation is grossly insufficient, and the entire university system is plagued with recurrent violence, malpractice and injustice.

    The consequences are stark in their impact. To all intents and purposes, Nigerian universities are globally invisible, falling well outside the top one thousand in the world. On the Webometrics Ranking of Universities, the highest-placed Nigerian university is Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, which is ranked 8th in Africa and 1113th in the world. The University of Ibadan is 24th in Africa and 2109th in the world. The University of Lagos is 25th in Africa and 2149th in the world. As local schools continue to decline, their foreign counterparts have become correspondingly attractive: an estimated $1 billion is spent annually on universities abroad, including a staggering N160 billion on Ghanaian schools alone.

    If an already bad situation is not to get infinitely worse, then both sides must stop seeking to score cheap points at the expense of each other. The Federal Government claims to have given ASUU proof of payment of the first tranche of N200 billion in accordance with the Aso Rock negotiations. The union should confirm this, and call off the strike as a sign of good faith.

    ASUU will also need to ensure that it does not confront government obtuseness with its own intransigence. Rather than seek to make political capital out of the tragic Iyayi case, it should ensure that a thorough investigation is carried out to determine what happened and see that those found culpable are dealt with according to law. The union must also avoid the temptation to drag extraneous issues into its disagreements with government. For example, the insistence that state-owned universities be part of all negotiations is obviously a little too much to ask for, given the country’s federal structure. It is only proper for such universities to talk to the state governments which own them, since the Federal Government cannot enter into any commitments on their behalf.

    The ASUU strike has caused great suffering to millions of students, their parents and guardians, as well as the towns and cities in which universities are located. The abrupt suspension of academic activity has worsened the already-parlous situation in which the universities find themselves. With greater patriotism and sincerity of purpose on the part of government and ASUU, such a needless crisis will be avoidable in the future.

  • Madiba’s death, a challenge to the oppressed—ASUU

    Madiba’s death, a challenge to the oppressed—ASUU

    The chairperson of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (NAU) branch, Prof. Ike Odimegwu, said Nelson Mandela, the Madiba, was a symbol of the best that everybody would want to be.

    “Persons like him showed that the best of humanity can be found in every clime and age.

    “The worst situation can also bring out the best in us. It is a challenge to every African, especially those who labour under exploitative leaderships.

    “It is a challenge to the oppressed and the governed that they can rise and demand for their rights. Unless they do that, they should not hope to have it given to them.

    “It is a challenge to the leaders that quality leadership is not alien to Africa and Africans. We all will miss Mandela” Odemegwu said.

  • Parents threaten to begin hunger strike

    Parents threaten to begin hunger strike

    Parents of university students in the Southwest have urged the Federal Government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to resolve their differences and end the five-month-old strike of the university teachers.

    The parents, under the aegis of the region’s National Association of Parents’-Teachers’ Associations (NAPTA), threatened to begin a hunger strike, if both parties failed to reconcile their differences.

    The Chairman of the association, Chief John Oluribigbe, addressed reporters yesterday in Ibadan, Oyo State, after the inauguration of new executives of the state chapter of the Parents’-Teachers’ Association (PTA).

    He described the face-off between ASUU and the Federal Government as an embarrassment to the nation.

    The parent urged influential Nigerians, particularly the traditional rulers and religious leaders, to intervene in the impasse in the interest of the nation.

    Oluribigbe said: “The over two million parents across the 36 states of Nigeria will embark on a national hunger strike, if this situation should continue. The Federal Government needs to accede to ASUU’s demands in the interest of the downtrodden parents.”

    To end the prolonged strike, he appealed to President Goodluck Jonathan to constitute a committee to dialogue with ASUU.

    He said: “When two elephants fight, the grass will definitely suffer. This time round, it is the parents that are suffering. We are left with no other option than to appeal to the two parties to see reasons why the strike should end. But if the strike persists, we shall embark on hunger strike.”

    Blaming the Federal Government for allowing the strike to be prolonged, the concerned parent advised the Federal Government to provide qualitative university education for Nigerians.

  • AAU vows to continue strike

    … Seeks Wike’s removal

    Lecturers at the Edo State owned university, the Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, have vowed to continue with the strike until “government do the right thing.”

    The lecturers also called for the immediate sack of the Supervising Minister of Education, Mr. Nyesom Wike over what they termed incompetence.

    They said Wike lacked the intellectual capabilities and competence to handle the country’s education system.

    They made their position known in a communiqué issued after an emergency meeting on Thursday.

    The communiqué signed by the chairman and the Secretary of ASUU-AAU chapter, Prof. Fred Esumeh and Dr. S. Omoikhoje respectively described the ultimatum by the federal government as unfortunate and ill-conceived in a democratic rule.

     

     

  • ACF to ASUU: Ratify agreement with FG

    The Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) on Thursday called on the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to ratify its agreement with the Federal Government so as to resume work immediately.

    The National Publicity Secretary of the forum, Mr. Anthony Sani, made the call in a statement released in Kaduna.

    The ACF said calling off the five-month-old strike would be in the best interest of students, parents and the educational system.

    “We wish to call on ASUU to please hasten the completion of the said paper work with a view to calling off the strike forthwith,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted ACF as saying in the statement.

    It also cautioned the federal government on the ultimatum issued to ASUU to resume lectures or be sacked, saying that it would only prolong the strike.

    “No purpose will be served by the ultimatum at this stage when ASUU has said all that remains for calling off the strike is mere paper work.

    “This is precisely because the ultimatum at this stage can only result in avoidable test of wills capable of prolonging the strike, which no one wants,” the forum said.

     

  • Union: write to us on the deposited N200 billion

    Union: write to us on the deposited N200 billion

    President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Dr. Nasir Isa Fagge, yesterday advised the government to write a letter informing the union of the deposited N200 billion.

    The N200 billion is part of the N1.3 trillion demanded by ASUU which was agreed will be paid within six years between this year and 2018.

    Government also promised that the funds will be ring-faced.

    Reacting to the Presidency’s claim that N200billon had been deposited with the CBN for onward distribution to the universities, Fagge in a telephone interview last night said government should follow the due process and stop briefing reporters instead of writing to ASUU.

    He said the letter should contain government’s response to the remaining three of the four conditions given by the union which are: That the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement in 2014 be included in the final document as agreed at the discussion with the President;

    •That a non-victimisation clause which is normally captured in all interactions of this nature be included in the final document;

    •And that a new Memorandum of Understanding shall be validly endorsed, signed by a representative of government, preferably the Attorney General of the Federation and a representative of ASUU, with the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) as a witness.

    “Informing the media when an official letter has not been written to ASUU is a wasted effort. Government should write ASUU officially informing the union of the deposited N200 billion. We are not fools. Government should be able to follow the due process.

    “We do not want to leave anything to chances. We understand English and the tactics more than government. After that official letter to ASUU is written containing the remaining three agreed positions, ASUU can respond and decide on when to call off the strike. Nobody can intimidate us.

  • Minister: ASUU strike will not affect FUNAI students

    THE Supervising Minister of Education, Mr Ezenwo Nyesom Wike has urged matriculating students of the Federal University, Ndufu Alike Ikwo (FUNAI) in Ebonyi State, to shun cultism and other vices inimical to their development.

    The Minister who gave the charge during the university’s second matriculation, promised the students of adequate infrastructure, conducive environment and competent lecturers to enable them excel in their chosen fields of study.

    Represented by Mr Victor Onuorah, the Minister also promised the students that they will graduate in record time as ASUU strike would not be allowed to derail their studies.

    “Eschew unwholesome activities like cultism, examination malpractice among others. I urge the matriculating students to make do with the opportunity available to them; ASUU strike will not affect you as long as you are here,” he stated.

    The Vice-Chancellor of the institution, Prof Oye Ibidapo-Obe reminded students that they were admitted on merit and hence must justify it or face severe sanctions for non performance.

    “This university is on the right track because we have continued to emphasise from the outset that it will not be business as usual – both on the side of our staff and students. Therefore, cultism, examination malpractice, drug abuse, sex or money for marks and the likes are seriously frowned at and abhorred by the university authorities.

    “The consequences of such acts of misconduct are rustication or outright expulsion of the culprits. We therefore admonish our students to mind their studies, and be of good behavior,” he said.

    Ibidapo-Obe said the university admitted 494 students, 256 of whom are in the sciences, while 236 are in the humanities and social sciences.

    He solicited the state government’s assistance in reconstructing the road leading to the school from Abakaliki, the state capital.

    The state Governor, Martin Elechi represented by the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt Hon Chukwuma Nwazunku promised the support of the state government towards making the university a world class institution.

  • Making hay while ASUU strikes

    Making hay while ASUU strikes

    They have refused to go home since the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike started in July. For six months now, Ben Wilson, Fidelis Ogiri and Jude Obi, who are students of the Cross River University of Technology (CRUTECH), have been on an unscheduled industrial attachment on the campus, learning construction work.

    They are in different departments. Fidelis is a 400-Level Technical Education student who has a passion for Civil Engineering. Wilson is a 100-Level student of Civil Engineering while Jude is a final year student of Architecture.

    With many ongoing projects in the school as it was being shut, the students decided to engage themselves while the strike is on. They didn’t go home like their mates instead they decided to continue their education on the field — acquiring practical skills in construction and civil engineering. When the site engineers saw how serious they were to learn, they incorporated them in the projects to hone their skills.

    The projects they are working on include the four-storey Administrative Block donated by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). The construction is being handled by Hospilas Nigeria Project.

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited one of the construction sites last week, our correspondent saw the students studying construction plans to set out activities of the day. When he sought to know why they joined in the construction project, Jude said: “It is because of my passion for Architecture.”

    He added: “I am a final year student of Architecture, but I had a fair knowledge of construction works before enrolling to study Architecture.”

    Obi said he did not want to be idle during the strike, adding he had been looking forward to practise what he was being taught in the class before leaving. “So, I see the strike as a blessing for me to gain more skills in my profession,” he said.

    Ben, who is a fresher, said: “I had worked with the Chinese Construction Company for years before my admission into this school. Because of the practical knowledge I had, I naturally found my way to the construction site. I showed the engineers the identity card I used in the Chinese company and they gave me a test which I passed. Then, they asked me to start.”

    On his part, Fidelis said he was incorporated to work as a store manager but he would not have got the job without the skills he acquired while on industrial training in an engineering firm.

    He added that his passion was to add value to the project, noting that he did not apply for money but to gain knowledge that would enhance his career.

    “I did a similar job during my industrial attachment. I need to learn from different engineers,” he said.

    One of the site engineers, who did not want his name in print, said Jude had shown commitment to learning new skills to help his career.

    He said: “What we do here is that when a student comes to work at our site, we look at his character first before trusting him. We don’t discriminate; if any student is capable of doing the tedious job, we would engage him.”

    On the stipends being paid to the students, the engineer said: “The main reason they are here is to learn practical skill to complement the theory they are being taught in class. But the stipend is commensurate to their level of experience.”

    He praised the students, describing them as “youngsters with a bright future”.