Tag: ASUU

  • David Mark not providing leadership

    David Mark not providing leadership

    PRESIDENT of the Senate, David Mark, surprised the public last week when he launched into a caustic attack on those who were party to the 2009 agreement between the federal government and university teachers. Both sides, he said trenchantly, were ignorant and mischievous. But his blistering attack suggested something much more insidious. In a subtle way, it indicated his underlying impatience with the unresolved Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike, and it also reflected his worldview, one inextricably connected with or subordinated to the futile worldview of Nigerian leaders in the past three decades or so. That worldview, however, transcends party affiliation, and is driven more by his innate desire to cooperate with the country’s leadership than by his desire to promote good governance and stability.

    After considering the issue of the university strike last week, the Senate mandated its president to mediate between the striking teachers and the federal government in order to resolve the dispute. But it is not clear to what extent his unguarded remarks about the university teachers, whom he described as opportunistic, and the federal government team whom he called outright ignoramuses, had weakened his own hand as a mediator and diminished the respect the teachers should have for him had he been more temperate and magisterial.

    Hear Senator Mark at his fulsome worst: “Listening to the agreement that was signed by the Federal Government, as Comrade Uche Chukwumerije read it out, I was really wondering whether this was signed or it was just a proposal. But when he concluded, he said it was signed. It only shows the level of people the executive sent to go and negotiate on their behalf because ab initio, people must be told the truth what can be accomplished and what cannot be accomplished. If a leader says I am going to accomplish this, he is morally duty bound to honour it. But even if you decided immediately after that you could not accomplish it, I think it is only proper for you to go back and start renegotiating…On the other hand, I think ASUU simply took advantage of the ignorance of those who were sent and simply just allowed this agreement to go on because it is obvious that this is going to be very difficult piece of paper to implement. They found that those who were sent there simply didn’t know their right from their left and they just went ahead.”

    Put simply, Senator Mark does not believe the 2009 agreement between the government and ASUU can be implemented, nor will he get the Senate to help the process. In addition, he thinks nothing of the quality of minds on both sides of the negotiating table that produced the 2009 deal. It is instructive that the president is of the same opinion, though he was as vice president an indirect party to the deal. And to underscore the paralysis that has made the Jonathan cabinet detached from reality, most members of the cabinet think the same way too, not the least vociferous among whom is the Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. However, Senator Mark’s tirade is more significant for what it does not say than what it says. His remarks go far beyond his opinion on the ASUU strike, or his unsavoury view on the teams that negotiated the 2009 agreement, whether they were competent or not. I’ll prove this assertion amply.

    I concede that for the more than six years Senator Mark has been president of the Senate, he has brought stability and order to the upper chamber of the National Assembly. His temperament, perhaps also his military training, and his ability to transform status quo into a dignified thing, are not altogether unsuited to the role of leading and guiding the legislature, whether at the lower level or at the upper level. Indeed, they help him check the adventurousness of senators, some of whom have a fondness for whimsically baying for blood. Elected to head the Senate in 2007, some say with the help of the (then) just departed President Olusegun Obasanjo, Senator Mark, I must acknowledge, seems both able and eager to continue in that position for a few more years, even beyond the 2015 polls. He has mastered the art of doing nothing significant regally.

    Indeed, there are many people who would want Senator Mark to continue presiding over the affairs of the Senate ad infinitum. President Goodluck Jonathan is one. So, too, would both Chief Obasanjo and the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, had they continued in office. To these three presidents, Senator Mark represents the archetypal Senate leadership upon which they would have felt comfortable and even enthusiastic to build their hopes, their programmes, no matter how ephemeral, and their unadulterated conservatism. The basic elements of Senator Mark’s political worldview are unrepentantly opposed to any form of surprise or radicalism. Had he been president of the Senate in the burdensome but insular days of the Obasanjo presidency, it is almost certain the former president would have had little desire to instigate the kind of leadership changes that convulsed the upper chamber and whittled down its prestige.

    As this column suggested last week, Nigeria is battling with the twin evils of leadership incompetence and creeping fascism, with the latter promoted and rendered lethal by the former. Though the Jonathan presidency has not given the impression it fully understands the weight of the problems afflicting Nigeria, and so cannot proffer the appropriate panaceas, few Nigerians doubt how perilously close the country is to the precipice. There is the unending Boko Haram revolt in the Northeast, sundry crimes such as kidnapping and armed robbery in the Southeast and South-South made worse by the most sustained piece of grand thievery of oil resources amounting to close to a billion dollars monthly, a host of socio-economic and political crises that are robbing every part of Nigeria of a great future, and a series of disaggregated but potent malfeasances enacted by ministers, commissioners, police and other security chiefs. The stark truth is that Nigeria has not had it so bad, no, not even in the larcenous days of the hedonist, Sani Abacha.

    It is precisely at this time of an underperforming presidency sustained by lies, propaganda and a grievous assault on the constitution in Rivers and other states, that the country requires the services of a wise, patriotic, visionary and courageous legislature. Sadly, it is at this time that the Senate is led by a pro-establishment, if not entirely reactionary, leadership, whose full-grown conservatism makes the moderating and restraining efforts of the House of Representatives look like sophomoric radicalism. Recall that the House of Representatives had to risk its credibility to restrain the Jonathan presidency from declaring a vicious and autocratic form of state of emergency in the Northeast, after the Senate had virtually given the president a carte blanche to do as he pleased. And now, the Senate under Senator Mark, is angry that ASUU sticks to its guns. How deep in ignominy will the Senate plumb before it reaches the bottom?

    It is time Senator Mark recognised that posterity is calling on him to build a legacy. But that legacy will not be built on the foundation and altar of a cosy relationship that has made the Senate under him indistinguishable from the executive. Even if he comes back to the Senate for a record fifth time, Senator Mark must realise he is unlikely to return as Senate President, no matter which archconservative takes Aso Villa and promotes his candidature. He should reflect on his tenure and those of his predecessors, recognise that a vibrant and knowledgeable Senate could have checked the misdeeds of the Obasanjo presidency, especially the former president’s mindlessly raucous and retrogressive privatisation policy (which stand in sharp contrast to his crazy nationalisation policy of the late 1970s), and that it is time the Senate was made to form an ironclad partnership with the House of Representatives to protect the constitution, checkmate fascism and destroy any appetite Dr Jonathan might have to undermine the veneer of federalism still sustaining the country’s unity.

    Senator Mark’s antecedents do not give hope that he can manage the needed transition, for apart from being thoroughly elitist, as his military days showed, he is not even a natural or artificial democrat, as his time in the Senate is showing effusively in all its unedifying colours. But I hesitate to write him off. Perhaps, he will view this admonition as the honest, plaintive cry of someone who cares about what legacy he would leave behind, and not the writing of one whom Dr Jonathan and his aides habitually denigrate as a destructive critic.

     

  • Edo Assembly urges ASUU to end strike

    Edo State House of Assembly has adopted a resolution urging the Academic Staff Union of University (ASUU) to call off its ongoing strike in the interest of the students and the nation at large.

    The adoption of the resolution is sequel to the consideration of a motion on the strike embarked upon by ASUU brought to the floor of the House by the Majority Leader, Hon. Philip Shaibu, under Matters of Urgent Public Importance.

    According to Shaibu, the over three months, strike embarked upon by the union has affected the university adversely and could lead to the eventual collapse of the nation’s educational sub-sector.

    He therefore appealed to ASUU to shift ground and call off the ongoing strike in the interest of the students, so that universities in the country could re-open while urging the federal government to expedite action towards the implementation of the 2009 agreement it signed with ASUU.

    Echoing similar sentiments, Hon. Kabir Adjoto, a member representing Akoko-Edo I constituency, urged ASUU to cooperate with federal government, noting that the demands of ASUU are cogent and reasonable but the interest of the country should be given utmost priority.

    Also speaking, Hon. Uyi Igbe, Speaker of the House of Assembly, appealed to ASUU to sheath its sword in the interest of the nation while urging the federal government to honour the agreement made with the union.

    Hon. Igbe also called on the federal government to devote reasonable share of its annual budgetary allocation to education in line with UNESCO policy on educational development.

    The House thereafter adjourned sittings to October 28, 2013 which according to the Speaker is to enable the House Standing Committees to fine-tune their reports for subsequent presentation and consideration by parliament.

  • We are tired of staying at home – Students

    We are tired of staying at home – Students

    With no end in sight to the over two months old strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), some Nigerian students spoke to The Nation on the effect of the strike and why the Federal Government should respond to the demands of ASUU with a view to making them return to the classroom.
    Lekan Aluko, 300 Level, Microbiology (OAU)
    My stay at home has been a terrible experience for me.  While in school, I used to do some business like download of android games and sell to some interested students but that cannot work here. Instead, I walk around hopelessly not doing anything.
    Chidinma Maduka, 100 Level, Culture and Tourism (UNIPORT)
    The strike has been good and bad in several ways. The good effect of the strike is the opportunity I have to eat my mother’s food. This has made me gain more weight than I used to be. Another good effect is the fact that I have more time to sleep, think, learn some skills and continue writing my yet to be published book.
    On the other hand, I should have rounded off my second semester examinations by now. Also, my modeling contract which was to start by July could not happen as the strike aborted it and no hope in sight.
    Tolulope Owokade, 200 level, International Relations (OAU)
    In fact, I am looking for a job to keep me from walking about aimlessly on the streets. When I was in school, I sell female wears, shower caps and undies and others as a source of generating income, but now I can’t do any of such here and hope of making money is not there at all. All I can do is to manage the little stipend I get from my parents.
    Akhigbe Paul (UNIBEN)
    I was in support of the strike, but now, I am no more in support of it. The strike has affected me negatively. There are a lot of things I should have done in school. The federal government should listen to what ASUU is demanding. After heeding to their request, the government should monitor everything ASUU does with the money and make sure they put in place everything they promised, like the infrastructure.
    Naomi Olamakinde, 300 level, Economics (UNILAG)
    This current ASUU Strike has provided me the opportunity to read at my own pace. I have also had the time to attend other programmes.
    Abiodun Aderibigbe   (FUTA)
    The strike has affected me greatly, but I am in support of it, they have to fight for their right and we have to take it in good faith. Though I am not happy staying at home, but I am in support of it because these people have been working, they should be rewarded.
    Uthman Bello, 200 level, Chemistry, University of Ibadan
    This strike has brought boredom and idleness. I’ve forgotten many things we did within 3 week.
     
    Olayinka Abdul   (UNAB)
    It has affected me negatively, it has really prolonged the period I am to use in school. I hope they can suspend the strike by reaching an agreement with ASUU soon, so that we can get back to our various schools.
    Adeyemo Adeleye, 200 level, Mass Communication, (UNILAG)
    The realization that this strike is still on seems to me that the authorities that are in power are not doing anything to avert this crisis.  It has affected almost all undergraduates in a similar way. Academic situation in our tertiary institutions are grounded. This is sad.
    Joel Otuyelu (UNILAG)
    This strike has affected me positively; I have time to put some things in place.
    Ihunanya Erondu, 300 level, (UNIPORT)
    I hate staying at home. This strike has kept me at home against my own wish. I want the strike to be called off immediately.
    Osatohanmhen Eghonghon Odigwe, (UNILAG)I just feel that the government does not truly see us as very important to the economy. I believe a better way can be used by ASUU to achieve their demands. With the way ASUU is pursuing our interest I’m not sure this is the best way.
  • ASUU: Jonathan was party to pact

    ASUU: Jonathan was party to pact

    UNIVERSITY teachers replied yesterday to Senate President David Mark’s comments on the 2009 agreement, which they are asking the Federal Government to implement.

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) explained how the agreement was signed. ASUU has been on strike for over four months.

    The union’s National Treasurer, Dr. Demola Aremu, said President Goodluck Jonathan was part of a long-drawn negotiation in 2009, which was reviewed in 2002 in a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).

    Mark said the government officials who signed the agreement “did not know their right from their left” and that the ASUU officials who negotiated exploited their ignorance.

    Aremu said ASUU had rejected the pleas from senators to call off their strike. He advised the lawmakers to beg President Jonathan to implement the agreement.

    Aremu recalled that it took ASUU and the Federal Government team, led by Mr Gamaliel Onosode, three years to arrive at the agreement, pointing out that it is pretentious for any top government functionary to claim that the government negotiating team did not understand fully what they signed with the teachers.

    According to him, ASUU went to the negotiation with a 300-page charter, which was reduced to a 60-page agreement after the union shifted so much ground on many of its demands.

    He said Dr. Jonathan, who was then the Vice President, asked the government to sign the agreement after thoroughly going through it for six months.

    “He perused the draft agreement and asked the government team to sign every page of the document. Our President also signed it. The content of the agreement we have today is not what we took to the negotiation table. That shows Nigerians how greatly we’ve shifted ground. So, the team knew what they went into.”

    Aremu explained that the Federal Government also came up with a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on the implementation of the agreement in January last year. He asked: “So, if anyone assumes that they didn’t know what they were doing in 2009, did they also not know what they were doing in 2012?”

    The union leader compares Nigeria’s tertiary education with a cancer patient. He said no palliative measure could help heal cancer, pointing out that the patient will die.

    “Begging will not bring any solution. Nigerians should rather beg government to face this agreement squarely and implement it. That is where our future lies,” Aremu said.

    He said senators could also cut their allowances and contribute them to education for the benefit of all citizens.

    The union also urged the National Assembly to go beyond “begging” ASUU to call off its strike, but plug spending leakages in government to allow for provision of needed infrastructure in the universities.

    The union also lashed out at the Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Prof. Sola Adeyeye, over his comments on why a professor will demand payment to supervise postgraduate students.

    A statement by the University of Ibadan (UI) chairman of the union, Dr Olusegun Ajiboye, titled: “The goofing Professor Adeyeye: Senate and begging comments”, said Adeyeye was using public funds to train his children abroad, besides lacking in knowledge of the situation in Nigerian universities.

    Ajiboye described Mark’s statement that ASUU will lose public sympathy, if it does not call off its strike, as “a careless talk” because, according to him, the Senate has already lost its credibility among Nigerians over its huge allowances and its perpetual anti-masses stance as opposed to the progressives in the House of Representatives.

    “We are fighting a just cause. Can the senators wait for four years of their tenure before their allowances are paid? Can the Senate members sit in the chambers without air conditioners? What role has the Senate played to increase budgetary allocation to education? It is even funny for the Senate President to feign ignorance of the ASUU agreement as the sitting Senate President in 2009,” Ajiboye said.

    ASUU said people, such as Adeyeye, ought to keep quiet when education is being discussed as “his immediate family members are not in Nigeria with all his children schooling and living abroad, using the millions of public funds being earned by their father in Nigeria to live large abroad.

    “As a professor at the Duquesne University USA, Professor Adeyeye enjoyed flexible single and family healthcare coverage, including vision and dental insurance, disability benefits and life insurance, tuition remission for employees and family members, retirement savings plan with a generous eight per cent university contribution for employees with immediate vesting schedule, family leave, paid time off for vacation and holidays and unpaid time for personal leave of absence, comprehensive employee training programmes which promote professional development, access to a recreation centre and wellness programme.

    “The question Prof Adeyeye should answer is, where in Nigeria does a professor enjoy all these with conducive learning environment? What is the ratio of students to a lecturer in Nigerian universities? Where else in the world will a professor supervise up to 35 students in a session?”

  • ASUU: we’re ready to approve extra  cash, says Tambuwal

    ASUU: we’re ready to approve extra cash, says Tambuwal

    HOUSE of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal yesterday said if there is a need to make extra budgetary provisions for the Federal Government to resolve the lingering face-off between it and the Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universities ASUU), the House would do so.

    The Speaker spoke in Abuja when he received a briefing on the ASUU strike from the Aminu Suleiman-led House Committee on Education.

    He called for a speedy resolution of the face-off between both sides, which have led to the closure of government-owned universities for nearly four months.

    The House mandated the Education committee to investigate the face-off by highlighting the areas of conflict and proffer solutions.

    Tambuwal urged the warring parties to consider the interest of the students and the educational future of the nation.

    He said: “Let me use this opportunity to appeal to both the Executive arm and the authorities of ASUU to quickly resolve the problem. If there is need for any appropriation, the House will expeditiously assent to it in the interest of our students and the nation.”

    The Ondo State Police Command yesterday dispersed the peaceful rally staged by the Federal University of Technology, Akure, branch of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and Adekunle Ajasin University (AAU) Akungba-Akoko.

    The police frustrated the planned rally in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

    They moved their officers and men to the entrance of the institution and blocked the protesters from moving out for the protest.

    The protesters, chanting various solidarity songs, carried placards with various inscriptions, such as “Sound universities yield national development”; “Okojo-Iweala, ask your dad about ASUU struggle”; “ASUU says no to destruction of public universities”; “Agreement is agreement, so FG should do the right thing”, among others.

    Addressing reporters on the police action, the ASUU-FUTA branch Chairman, Dr Alex Odiyi, wondered why the police prevented the union’s members from holding the protest.

    He said: “We wonder why the police are doing this to us. We want to go to the town to inform the public about the true state of things. That is our intention. Now, they are saying we should not go. This is very unfortunate.”

    At the AAU, Akungba-Akoko, the university teachers were disallowed from staging their peaceful protest.

    Police spokesman Wole Ogodo said the police prevented the protesters so that the protest would not be hijacked by the hoodlums.

    “We have information that some hoodlums wanted to attack the lecturers. We don’t want that to happen, because it can cause another crisis in the town. That is why we stopped the protest from going beyond their campus,” Ogodo said.

    The University of Benin (UNIBEN) chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yesterday held a road show and protest through major streets of Benin, the Edo State capital.

    The protesters wore academic gowns and carried placards with various inscriptions.

    They accused the government of plotting to sell the universities and embarking on what they called an “offensive propaganda”.

    The UNIBEN-ASUU chairman Dr Anthony Monye-Emina said the allowance allegedly released by the government was not their priority.

    He said university lecturers were interested in the funding of “infrastructure, science laboratory, workshops and others”.

    Monye said the government did not behave with honour because President Goodluck Jonathan chaired the fundraising of a private university at a time public universities were on strike.

    He said: “This government is shameless and has no honour. Tutors have been on strike since July 1 to press home their 2009 agreement with the federal government. We are not making fresh demands. The 2009 agreement recommended N1.6 trillion to cater for education and this ought to be provided at the rate of N400 billion within a period of four years.

    “The government keeps saying no money to fund education. Yet, it bailed out banks, aviation and even Nollywood.”

    A former ASUU President Dr Festus Iyayi said the government could not say there was no money.

    He said: “The president of United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, last July, indicated that the amount of money stolen by Nigerians was over $600 billion. If you piled up that money, it would get to the moon seven times and back.”

  • ASUU to NASS: Plug spending leakages in government

    ASUU to NASS: Plug spending leakages in government

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities on Thursday asked the National Assembly to go beyond “begging” ASUU to call off its strike, but assist in plugging spending leakages in government in order to allow for provision of needed infrastructural facilities for Nigerians.

    The union also lashed out at the Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Education, Prof. Sola Adeyeye, over his comments on the ongoing ASUU strike.

    Adeyeye had reportedly asked why a professor will demand payment to supervise postgraduate students.

    A release signed by the Chairman, University of Ibadan chapter of ASUU, Dr. Olusegun Ajiboye, and tagged- “The Goofing Prof. Adeyeye: Senate and begging comments,” said, Prof. Adeyeye is using public funds to train all his children abroad, hence he lacks knowledge on the situation of things in the Nigerian universities.

    Ajiboye also condemned the Senate President, David Mark’s comments that ASUU will lose public sympathy if it does not call off its strike, saying such was a careless talk as the Senate had already lost its credibility among Nigerians over its bogus allowances and its perpetual anti-masses stance as opposed to the progressives in the House of Representatives.

    “We are fighting a just cause. Can the Senate members wait for four years of their tenure before their allowances are paid? Can the Senate members seat in the chambers without air conditioners? What role has the Senate played to increase budgetary allocation to education? It is even funny for the Senate President to feign ignorance of the ASUU agreement as the sitting Senate President in 2009.”

     

  • ASUU ‘demands N1.5tr’ to end strike

    ASUU ‘demands N1.5tr’ to end strike

    University teachers are asking for N1.5 trillion to return to the classrooms, a senator claimed yesterday.

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has been on strike for about four months.

    The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Senator Uche Chukwumerije, mentioned the figure in his contribution to a motion urging the lecturers to call off their strike.

    The motion, sponsored by the Senate Leader, Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba (Cross River Central) and 106 others is titled “Appeal to Academic Staff Union of Universities to call off the strike and return to work”.

    Chukwumerije, who read the controversial 2009 agreement between the Federal Government and ASUU, said part of the component of the agreement on funding stipulated that “all regular Federal universities shall require N1.5 trillion for the period 2009 to 2011.

    He said ASUU was insisting that the agreement be implemented to the letter.

    He said that the agreement also said “this money is to be paid in three installments, 2009 almost N500 billion; 2010 almost N500 billion; 2011 almost N506 billion”.

    Besides the N1.5 trillion, the agreement also stipulated that “each state university shall require N3.6 million” while “a minimum of 26 per cent of the annual budget should be allocated to education”.

    According to him, the agreement also said that “Education should be put on First Line Charge” and the Education Tax Act should be amended to its original concept as High Education Fund.”

    He noted that the agreement said that “Governing Council of Universities should access and effectively utilise the Education Tax Fund for research, training and development of academic staff”.

    Other components of the agreement include Salary Structure and earned allowances.

    The earned academic staff allowances include: “Post graduate supervision allowances; Teaching practice and industrial allowances; honorarium for external moderation of undergraduate and postgraduate examination system, postgraduate study grants; external assessment of readers or professors, Call duty and clinical duty and hazard allowance and excess workload allowance.”

    Other demands include “non salary condition of service, which includes clinical load, car refurbishing, housing loan, research leave, sabbatical leave, sick leave, maternity leave, injury pension, provision of office accommodation and facilities.”

    Pension of university academic staff and compulsory retirement age, National Health Insurance Scheme, transfer of landed property, patronage of university services, funds from alumni associations, private sector contributions, cost saving measures, duty free importation of education materials by universities and setting up research development units by companies operating in Nigeria, were also part of the agreement.

    Also setting up of budget monitoring committee, University post doctoral fellowship, which says that each university governing council should introduce post doctoral fellowship leave with pay outside Nigeria, Provision for teaching and research, national research funds, University autonomy and academic freedom, membership of governing councils, review of laws that impend university autonomy, academic freedom in terms of accountability and transparency and No Sole Administrators for universities, were included in the agreement..

    Chukwumerije said there were in the agreement ambiguities that should have been avoided.

    Ndoma-Egba noted that on July 1, ASUU began a strike to protest the failure of the Federal Government to implement the 2009 agreement signed with the union for the proper funding of the universities.

    He said for upwards of four months, the strike has paralysed work in universities and rendered students redundant.

    He observed that while the Federal Government may have released N100billion for infrastructure development in the universities and N30billion for accumulated allowances of lecturers, the lecturers have rejected the gesture as being grossly inadequate.

    The Senate Leader observed that despite several negotiations between the striking lecturers and representatives of the Federal Government coupled with the intervention of prominent Nigerians for the parties to reach a compromise, the strike has persisted.

    Ndoma-Egba is worried that “this is one strike too many and the entire education is grinding to a halt, considering that not only is ASUU, the Academic Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) is on strike and the Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) recently embarked on a seven days warning strike, all separately pressing for demands not unconnected with funding.”

    He added that he is disturbed further that “after about four months of fruitless negotiations between the ASUU and the Federal Government over the strike, there are strong indications that the Federal Government may have commenced the implementation of the ‘No Work, No Pay’ rule, a development that may further compound amicable resolution of the dispute.”

    He urged the Senate to resolve to appeal to the striking lecturers to suspend the strike and return to work to prevent further devaluation of Nigeria’s educational fortunes.

    He prayed the upper chamber to mandate the Committee on Education to continue to liaise with the Federal Ministry of Education, the National Universities Commission, ASUU and all other stakeholders to proffer a lasting solution to strikes in the sector.

    He urged the Senate to mandate the Senate President, David Mark to engage President Goodluck Jonathan and the leadership of ASUU to resolve the crisis.

    The three prayers were unanimously adopted.

    Mark who summed up senators’ contributions, said: “The essence of this motion is to find a solution and a way forward. I have listened to all those that have spoken so far.

    “There are immediate problems that we need to tackle yesterday and some that we need to plead with all the parties involved to give time so that they can sort it out.

    “My personal appeal on behalf of the Senate to all the parties involved will be that they try to understand.

    “Let us shift ground in our understanding of the problem and find a solution because if all the parties involved just dig in and they say they won’t shift ground, then there will be no solution to it and Nigeria will be worse off for it.

    “Whether it is the executive, the legislature or the judiciary or ASUU, not shifting ground is not going to help to find a lasting solution to the problem.

    “I want to appeal to ASUU and in fact let me even use the words, I want to beg ASUU on behalf of the Senate that they resume and come back to work.

    “They have made a strong case. Their position is obvious now. We can now see the consequences of their action and I think if they extend it beyond this then they will begin to lose public sympathy.

    “I will personally beg them if that is the way that they think will help them to get back to work.

    “There is no winner, there is no loser in this exercise. As long as the strike continues, nobody will win and everybody will lose.

    “So if we look at it from the perspective of saying yes, ASUU will win and the executive will win then we are missing the point completely.

    “It is not a question of a winner or a loser, all of us will lose. ASUU will lose, the country will lose and we will lose and we don’t want to find ourselves in that type of situation.

    “All of you have spoken very well. It is not a matter of PDP, APC or any other political party. We are all Nigerians and if we don’t build a solid foundation in our education system, we are going to lose at the end of the day.

    Mark spoke of research as the pillar of national development, which, in his view, “must be hinged purely on education not on oil, not even on the amount of money that we get.

    “Listening to the agreement that was signed by the Federal Government as Comrade Uche Chukwumerije read out, I was really wondering whether this was signed or it was just a proposal.

    “But when he concluded, he said it was signed. It only shows the level of people the Executive sent to go and negotiate on their behalf because ab initio, people must be told the truth, what can be accomplished and what cannot be accomplished.

    “If a leader says I am going to accomplish this, he is morally bound to honour it. But, even if you decided immediately after that you cannot accomplish it, I think it is only proper for you to go back and start renegotiating.

    “But if you prolong it on the basis that you are still going to honour it and you don’t honour it, then it doesn’t portray us in good light.

    “This is where the Federal Government ought to call those who were party to this agreement,” the Senate President said.

    To him, “ASUU simply took advantage of the ignorance of those who were sent and simply just allowed this agreement to go on because it is obvious that this is going to be very difficult piece of paper to implement”.

    Mark added: “They found that those who were sent there simply didn’t know their right from their left and they just went ahead.

    “I think that also is not fair because ASUU is an organisation in Nigeria and we are not going to go to another country to implement this piece of paper.

    “It was obvious to me as soon as Chukwumerije concluded that this was a difficult thing for them to implement.

    “I think in all seriousness we will make this passionate appeal to all the parties involved.”

  • ASUU ‘wants N1.5tr’ to end strike

    ASUU ‘wants N1.5tr’ to end strike

    The Senate on Wednesday said that the striking Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) wants N1.5 trillion to end its ongoing strike.

    The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Senator Uche Chukwumerije, released the figure in his contribution on a motion urging the striking lecturers to call off their strike.

    The motion sponsored by the Senate Leader, Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba, and 106 others is entitled: “Appeal to Academic Staff Union of Universities to call off the strike action and return to work.”

    Chukwumerije, who read the controversial 2009 agreement between the Federal Government and ASUU, said that part of the component of the agreement on funding stipulated that “all regular federal universities shall require the sum of N1.5 trillion for the period 2009 to 2011.

    He said that ASUU is insisting that the agreement must be implemented to the latter.

    He said the agreement also said that “This money is to be paid in three installments, 2009 – almost N500 billion; 2010 – almost N500 billion and 2011 – almost N506 billion.

    Apart from the N1.5 trillion the agreement also stipulated that “each state university shall require N3.6 million” while “a minimum of 26 per cent of the annual budget should be allocated to education.”

    According to him, the agreement also said that “education should be put on First Line Charge” while the Education Tax Act should be amended to its original concept as High Education Fund.”

    He noted that the agreement said that “Governing Council of Universities should access and effectively utilize from Education Tax Fund funds for research, training and development of academic staff.”

    Other components of the agreement included Salary Structure of Academic Staff of Nigerian universities and earned academic staff allowances.

    The earned academic staff allowances include: “Post graduate supervision allowances; teaching practice and industrial allowances; honorarium for external moderation of undergraduate and postgraduate examination system, postgraduate study grants; external assessment of readers or professors, call duty and clinical duty and hazard allowance and excess workload allowance.”

     

  • Police stop ASUU street protest in Bayelsa

    The police on Tuesday continued their nationwide clampdown on street protests organised by the Academic Staff Union of Universities.

    This time it was in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, where the Niger Delta University’s chapter of the union was prevented by the police from holding a public rally to protest the Federal Government’s refusal to implement the 2009 agreement signed by both parties.

    The Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr. Hilary Opara, was said to have issued an order to the leadership of ASUU-NDU preventing any form of public protest by the union.

    The order, however, allowed the aggrieved university lecturers to hold their protest within the university’s Law Faculty in Yenagoa.

    The placard-carrying lecturers soon converted their protest to a prayer session where they took turns to “cast and bind” all the spirits that had prevented the government from honoring the agreement.

    The lecturers also sought divine intervention to all the cases of blackmail and intimidation against the union by the Federal Government.

    Chairman of ASUU-NDU, Beke Sese, who addressed the rally, also disclosed that the Chief Security Officer (CSO) to Governor Seriake Dickson interrogated him few hours to the planned protest.

    Some of the placards displayed by the lecturers bore messages such as, “Not every child can go to Ghana to study,” “Agreement is Agreement,” “Government save our universities,” “Poor people’s children need universities,” “Can your child afford to go to Ghana and Malaysia, if no then join ASUU to better our universities.”

    Sese said the 17-week old strike was being sustained by ASUU’s collective resolve to stem the downward trend government had subjected public education to.

    He said the government was “systematically destroying public education through mindless neglect and near total abandonment.”

    He also observed that some opposition politicians had capitalised on the strike to cast aspersions on the government and thereby trivialising ASUU’s genuine struggle.

    Sese said ASUU struggles had been driven by legitimate causes rather than regional, ethnic or any other political considerations.

    He said the on-going strike has presented the government a golden opportunity to make history by revitalizing public universities in Nigeria.

     

  • ASUU strike: NUT meets Thursday

    ASUU strike: NUT meets Thursday

    The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) is to hold a National Executive Council (NEC) meeting on Thursday to decide its next line of action over the lingering strike by university teachers.

    The NUT President, Mr. Michael Alogba-Olukoya, said this in a telephone chat with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on Tuesday.

    The union had on September 26 given a two-week ultimatum to the Federal Government and the lecturers to resolve their differences and end the strike or face nationwide strike by NUT members.

    The lecturers under the aegis of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) embarked on the nationwide strike on July 1.

    The lecturers described the strike as “comprehensive, total and indefinite.”

    Alogba-Olukoya told NAN that the union extended the ultimatum following appeals from well-meaning Nigerians.

    He, however, noted that the extension would end on Tuesday.

    “Since we gave the ultimatum, well meaning Nigerians have been pleading with us.

    “In order not to cry more than the bereaved, we gave them till October 22. The NEC members will meet on Thursday to decide our next line of action, “he said.

    NAN reports that the university teachers are protesting non-implementation of an agreement they signed with the Federal Government in 2009 on improved funding of universities and payment of allowances to ASUU members, among others issues.