Tag: ASUU

  • ASUU gives N5.8m scholarships to 29 indigent OOU students

    ASUU gives N5.8m scholarships to 29 indigent OOU students

    …appeals FG to sustain TETfund

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has awarded scholarship grants of N5.8 million to 29 indigent students of the state-owned Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) Ago-Iwoye.

    Each student received ₦200,000.

    While the OOU branch of the ASUU gave the scholarships to 27 of the students, the ASUU national body awarded its own to two students, bringing the number of the beneficiaries to 29, to lessen the burden of university education on them.

    Presenting the grants to each of the beneficiaries at the ASUU-OOU Secretariat after its Branch Congress yesterday, the ASSU-OOU chairman, Dr. Olukayode Oyenuga, said the beneficiaries were chosen based on their financial needs and impressive academic records.

    Oyenuga who was represented at the occasion by his Vice Chairman, Dr. Eniola Olooto, advised the students to utilize the grant wisely and consider saving part of the money for future semesters when they may need it more.

    “ASUU National sponsored two students, while ASUU-OOU branch sponsored 27 students, making a total of 29 beneficiaries.

    Read Also: FG signs MoU with WIOCC to connect three million homes with internet services 

    “We hope to sponsor more scholarships, but our capacity depends on available funds. This year, ASUU increased the scholarship amount by ₦100,000 due to economic factors.

    “ASUU members are like local parents to students. Within our financial limits, we’ll continue assisting indigent students,” he said.

     Two of the beneficiaries, Zulaikha Idris Omayoza, a final-year Pharmacy student and Oppoola Kingdom, a 500-level crop production student, thanked the ASUU for the financial palliative, saying it would go a long way to address their needs.

    “The scholarship has changed my perception of ASUU. I learned about the opportunity through a lecturer and I am grateful I took advantage of it. This grant has inspired me to practice generosity when I’m able,” Oppoola Kingdom said

    Speaking to reporters through Olooto, the ASUU – OOU chair appealed to the federal government to sustain the existence of the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETfund) and not to sacrifice it for the National Education Loans Fund (NELfund) scheme of the present administration.

    He said the TETfund is the reason people could still see a modicum of infrastructural development going on across public universities in the country, warning that there would be a return to the era of decadence in infrastructure in public universities if the TETfund is scrapped.

     He said: “Tetfund is a product of ASUU’s struggles. About 90% of university structures are Tetfund sponsored. If we renamed our university ‘Tetfund University,’ we wouldn’t be wrong.

    “These funds have enabled us to develop our universities. Without Tetfund, we are going back to the pre-Tetfund era, characterized by archaic structures.

    “It is Tetfund that is not making the absence of government to be felt in universities.”

  • ASUU not against Tinubu’s govt reforms, says Benin zonal coordinator

    ASUU not against Tinubu’s govt reforms, says Benin zonal coordinator

    The Benin Zonal Coordinator of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Prof. Monday Igbafen, has stated that the union is not against the reforms of the administration of President Bola Tinubu, but they (reforms) should not be inimical to tertiary education in Nigeria.

    Igbafen spoke yesterday at a news conference at the University of Benin (UNIBEN) in Benin, Edo State, which was attended by ASUU’s leaders in the zone.

    He also expressed displeasure over the inability of the Federal Governments of Nigeria to follow the 26 per cent benchmark of budgetary allocation to education, prescribed by the United Nations (UN), while stating that the country in last few years had continued to oscillate between 5 per cent and 7 per cent, with Tinubu’s government retaining 7 per cent allocation to education.

    Read Also: FG, states, LGAs share N1.424trn in January 2025

    The Benin zonal coordinator of ASUU criticised the 2024 Tax Reforms Bill of the Tinubu’s administration, which was described as a coup against tertiary education in Nigeria.

    He picked hole in Section 59, Sub-sections 3 of the Nigeria Tax Bill (NTB) 2024, which stated that only 50 per cent of the development levy would go to the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) in 2025, while National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI), and Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) would share the remaining 50 per cent.

    Igbafen said: “ASUU has been entangled with the Nigerian government over deliberate starvation of funds, which resulted in infrastructural decay of teaching facilities, poor students’ welfare, low staff remuneration and retardation in public universities in the country.”

  • Tax Bill on TETFund may cripple tertiary education – ASUU

    Tax Bill on TETFund may cripple tertiary education – ASUU

    The Yola Zone of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has said the Nigeria Tax Bill (NTB) 2024 as it stands will steadily starve the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) of necessary funding. 

    It worried the Fund will die by 2030 when allocation to it will finally cease completely.

    The Yola Zone of ASUU, which comprises Adamawa State University (ADSU) Mubi, Modibbo Adama University (MAU) Yola, Federal University Gashua (FUGA), Taraba State University (TSU) Jalingo, University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) and Yobe State University (YSU), Damaturu, stated this in Yola, expressing the fear that zero allocation to TETFund by the year 2030 would surely mean the end of it.

    The Yola Zone Coordinator of ASUU, Dani Mamman, addressing a briefing at the MAU campus, said ASUU which played a pivotal role in establishing TETFund is keen to see it survive.

    He said it was unacceptable that the proposed controversial NTB 2024 seeks to dismantle TETFund by allocating only 50 percent of the development levy to it from 2025 to 2026 with the remaining half diverted to National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI), and Nigeria Education Loans Fund (NELFUND).

    Read Also: ASUU decries alleged plan to abolish TETFund

    “Replacing TETFund’s vital role with NELFUND such that by the year 2030 and beyond, TETFund will receive zero allocation from the development levy is an ill-conceived and unjustifiable move that will cripple public tertiary education,”  Mamman said.

    He added that redirecting funds meant for TETFund to other agencies contradicts the TETFund Act 2011 and a gross mis-allocation of resources.

    “The consequences of this policy are dire. It will inevitably lead to a return to the dark ages of underfunded and crumbling universities,” Mamman said.

  • ASUU decries alleged plan to abolish TETFund

    ASUU decries alleged plan to abolish TETFund

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has raised a  red flag against alleged plan to abolish the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund).

    The union described the alleged plan as dangerous for the country’s tertiary education system.

    Its Calabar Zone of the union said this after its zonal conference yesterday in Abakaliki, the Ebonyi State capital. The zone comprises seven public universities in Ebonyi, Cross River, Akwa Ibom, and Abia states. They include: Abia State University (ABSU), Akwa Ibom State University (AKSU), Ebonyi State University (EBSU), Alex Ekwueme Federal University, Ndufu Alike Ikwo (AE-FUNAI), University of Calabar (UNICAL), University of Cross River State (UNICROSS), and University of Uyo (UNIUYO).

    In a statement by the union’s Zonal Coordinator Happiness Uduk, ASUU condemned the alleged plan to abrogate what it called the “live-wire” of tertiary institutions in Nigeria by approving a zero allocation to TETFund as from Year 2030.

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    The zonal coordinator described TETFund as the major source of funding in public tertiary institutions, adding that it had been pivotal to the improvement and maintenance of standards in higher educational institutions.  

    He said it would amount to being unpatriotic if the proposed tax regime in which education tax, called Development Levy meant for bankrolling TETFund’s programmes owing to dearth and decay of educational infrastructures, was allowed to be ceded to the newly established Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND).  

    “ASUU notes with serious concern Section 59(3) of the Nigeria Tax Bill (NTB) 2024, which specifically states that only 50% of the Development Levy would be made available to TETFund in 2025 and 2026 while NITDA, NISENI, and NELFUND would share the remaining percentage,” Uduk said.  

    The ASUU zonal coordinator urged governments, stakeholders and well-meaning Nigerians to reject the proposed abrogation of TETFund, describing the move as an ill will with dire consequences.  

  • ASUU warns against abolishing TETFund, says it’s a threat to tertiary education

    ASUU warns against abolishing TETFund, says it’s a threat to tertiary education

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has raised concerns over alleged plans to abolish the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), warning that such a move would pose a significant threat to Nigeria’s tertiary education system. 

    ASUU, however, called for increased financial support to TETFund to enhance universities and curb the growing trend of Nigerian students seeking education abroad. 

    This position was made clear by ASUU’s Calabar zone during its zonal conference in Abakaliki, Ebonyi State, on Monday.

    The zone comprises seven public universities across Ebonyi, Cross River, Akwa Ibom, and Abia States, including Abia State University (ABSU), Akwa Ibom State University (AKSU), Ebonyi State University (EBSU), Alex Ekwueme Federal University, Ndufu Alike Ikwo (AE-FUNAI), University of Calabar (UNICAL), University of Cross River State (UNICROSS), and University of Uyo (UNIUYO). 

    The union strongly criticized a component of the proposed Nigerian Tax Bill, currently before the National Assembly, which seeks to abolish TETFund by ceasing its funding from 2030.

    They described the plan as a dangerous policy that could dismantle the backbone of tertiary education in Nigeria, which TETFund has sustained over the years. 

    Read Also: Reps kick as agencies fail to honour parliamentary invitation

    In a statement signed by the Zonal Coordinator, Happiness Uduk, ASUU labelled the move to end TETFund allocations as unpatriotic.

    The union argued that TETFund has been the primary source of funding for public tertiary institutions, essential for improving infrastructure and maintaining standards. 

    The statement further condemned the proposed redirection of the education tax, currently supporting TETFund’s programs, to the newly established Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND).

    ASUU described this as a misguided shift that prioritizes loans over critical infrastructure development in the education sector. 

    “ASUU notes with serious concern Section 59(3) of the Nigeria Tax Bill (NTB) 2024, which specifically states that only 50% of the Development Levy would be made available to TETFund in 2025 and 2026 while NITDA, NISENI, and NELFUND would share the remaining percentage,” the Union said.  

    ASUU, therefore, called on governments, stakeholders and well-meaning Nigerians to reject the abrogation of TETFund, describing the move as an ill wind with dire consequences.  

    The university teachers’ union further noted that the TETFund Act has not been repealed and that taking funds from the Education Tax (Development levy) to fund other agencies not provided for in the Act is unlawful and contravenes the extant laws of the land. 

    “ASUU, therefore, is vehemently opposed to this and condemns the abrogation of the live-wire of tertiary institutions in Nigeria by allowing a zero allocation to TETFund by 2030.” 

    “We, therefore, call on the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Senate President, the Speaker of the National House of Assembly, and all National Assembly members, State Governors, parents, students, and indeed all well-meaning Nigerians to reject the abrogation of TETFund as it is an ill wind that is pregnant with dire consequences,” ASUU said.  

    The union also faulted the creation of NELFUND to provide student loans in millions of Naira in a country where the State Governors have not agreed to pay a minimum wage of N70,000.00. 

    “This is a calamity that will lead to very unpleasant outcomes when students graduate and are not provided with well-paid jobs that can guarantee repayment. 

    “It spells doom as students may be forced to use the so-called education loan to fund universities through outrageous fees and levies,” they said. 

    The union further noted that the impact and interventions of TETFund, even with the vested interests, are the reasons tertiary institutions have not lost their glory like the public primary and secondary schools in Nigeria. 

    “We, therefore, propose that henceforth, only academics should be appointed to the Executive Secretary position of TETFund so that the Executive Secretary can easily connect with the dreams and aspirations of tertiary institutions with a clear vision and mission,” the union added.

  • ASUU to FG: Don’t abolish TETFund

    ASUU to FG: Don’t abolish TETFund

    Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, has appealed to the Federal government to shelve the idea of abolishing the Tertiary Education Trust Fund, TETFund.

     The Owerri Zone of the union, comprising five universities in Anambra, Abia and Imo states, said scrapping TETFund  will give private universities the room to thrive  more than public universities.

    Addressing reporters yesterday at the ASUU Secretariat of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka, the ASUU Coordinator, Owerri Zone, Prof Dennis Aribodor,said the union will discuss with the National Assembly on the issue. 

    His words: “The far-reaching consequence of the new tax system is that from 2030, all funds generated from the Development Levy would be passed to NELFUND. 

    “ASUU Owerri Zone finds this development not only worrisome but also inimical to our national development objective because of the potential danger it has to the survival of TETFund.

    Read Also: Our expectations this year, by ASUU, CONUA, NAPTAN, NANS

    “ASUU Owerri Zone has resolved not to stand by and watch the denigration or obliteration of TETfund which represents the positive testament to our union’s constructive engagements with Nigeria governments since 1992.

     ” It is our considered view that abrogating the TETFund Act 2011, by design or default, will be a great disservice not just to education but to Nigeria as a nation.

     “As a result, ASUU Owerri Zone is urging all stakeholders in the education project particularly the National Assembly, especially the Senate President and the Speaker of House of Representatives, to do all within their capacity to protect TETFund from being abrogated under the Nigeria Tax Bill, 2024 and save the killing of public tertiary education.”

  • Poor welfare chasing young Nigerians from lecturing, says ASUU

    Poor welfare chasing young Nigerians from lecturing, says ASUU

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has said the poor working conditions among public varsities’ lecturers fuel the reluctance of qualified young academics to take up jobs in the university system.

    The chairman of the University of Ibadan (UI) chapter of the union, Prof. Ayo Akinwole, said this in his New Year message.

    The union leader said the situation also affected primary and secondary schools where “the teachers are not well-paid, leading to the reluctance of qualified teachers to take up employment in public primary and secondary schools, paving the way for the untrained and unqualified teachers hold sway”.

    He added: “The result of this has been the proliferation of private schools, most of which are out of the reach of the poor due to the exorbitant fees they charge.”

    Akinwole noted that the university system witnessed stagnation in 2024, saying it would have been thrown into another industrial crisis, if the lecturers had not made significant sacrifices to save the day.

    The ASUU leader said Nigeria’s education would likely remain the same because it was allocated about seven per cent (N3.52 trillion) in tis year’s budget (N47.90 trillion).

    Read Also: Akpabio, Abbass pledge support for Mr. President

    According to him, this “falls far below the benchmark of 15 per cent to 20 per cent educational budget for underdeveloped countries, like Nigeria, specified by both UNESCO and United Nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA), which has been advocated by our union”.

    Praising the Federal Government for setting up a committee to renegotiate the 2009 FGN/ASUU agreement, Akinwole warned against delayed tactics, like the previous administrations demonstrated.

    He said: “To be sure, since 2017, various committees had been put in place by the government to renegotiate the agreement with ASUU.

    “For instance, the Babalakin-led Joint Renegotiation Committee was set up, followed by Emeritus Professor Munzali Jubril-led Committee, and followed by the late Prof. Nimi Briggs-led Committee, which yielded a draft agreement between the committee and ASUU in 2021.

    “Unfortunately, the (Muhammadu) Buhari administration refused to sign the agreement reached upon by a committee set up by it. It is, therefore, our opinion that instead of a fresh renegotiation of the agreement, the Tinubu-led administration should rather set in motion a process that will lead to the review and signing of the Nimi Briggs-led renegotiated draft agreement as a mark of goodwill and assured hope for Nigeria’s public universities.”

  • Our expectations this year, by ASUU, CONUA, NAPTAN, NANS

    Our expectations this year, by ASUU, CONUA, NAPTAN, NANS

    It was mixed fortunes for education last year. Though the sector still contends with the perennial issues of industrial action by university unions, out-of-school children, hike in university tuition, poor funding, unbearable electricity bills in universities, among others, President Bola Tinubu’s assent to the Student Loan Scheme, negotiation with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). But the appointment of new education minister, underlines the current administration’s resolve to reposition the country’s education. Thus, stakeholders, critics and observers expect government not only to consolidate on its progress, but address other pressing issues in the new year, reports DAMOLA KOLA-DARE

    Education reforms

    Since assuming office, President Bola Tinubu has approved various policies and instituted reforms largely to overhaul the education sector, improve enrolment, learning, skill development and ensure access to quality education for all.

    The present administration’s “Renewed Hope Education Roadmap for Nigeria” is poised to create a robust education sector, which provides access to quality education capable of producing a highly skilled and educated workforce.

    The  agenda, which includes  the DOTS,  an acronym for:  Data Repository, Out-of-School Children Education, Teachers Training & Development, and Skill Development and Acquisition, also seeks to reduce substantially,  the number of Out-of-School Children, integrate skills into the entire education system to address  learning crisis, reduce unemployment and build a reliable and authentic database for the sector.

    The President’s determination to put an end to incessant strikes by unions in universities underscored the will to ensure stability in the country’s university system.

    Just as the Student Loan Scheme demonstrated a commitment to unfettered access to education, the negotiation with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) only reinforced the President’s statement: …”there will be no more strikes in our universities”.

    He said: “I will extend the credit facilities to university students as loans. I will make our education system, especially the university education, more stable by dealing with the problem of ASUU strikes. There will be no more strikes in our universities.”

    Though, the President’s efforts have shown there is hope, stakeholders including ASUU, the Congress of Nigerian University Academics(CONUA), the National Association of University Students (NAUS), the National Parent Teacher Association of Nigeria (NAPTAN), the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), among others, have urged government to do more to reposition the education sector, along the lines of funding, robust infrastructure, encouraging cutting-edge research, addressing welfare concerns of university unions, among others.

    CONUA: Tinubu should break funding jinx

    National President of the Congress of  Nigerian University Academics (CONUA), Dr Niyi Sunmonu, expects the administration of President Bola Tinubu to break the education funding jinx by increasing allocation up to the United Nations Education and Socio-Cultural Organisation’s (UNESCO) minimum benchmark of 26 per cent.

    In a chat with The Nation, Sunmonu noted that successive governments in the country have not given premium priorities to education, in terms of allocation. CONUA expects the President to stop the trend.

    “Successive governments in the country have not given premium priorities to education, in terms of allocation and CONUA expects the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration to break the jinx by increasing allocation up to the UNESCO’s minimum benchmark.

    “Being a government that campaigned on Renewed Hope mantra, the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration should ensure it meets the minimum requirements of the UNESCO benchmark, going forward, to inject new vigour into the sector and rekindle the hope of a better future for Nigeria and Nigerians.

    “CONUA expects to see a great reduction in the out-of-schools’ children, solving the problems of huge gap of infrastructural deficit in our tertiary institutions, and above all, great improvements in the welfare package of educational facilitators at all levels, including university academics. The union is aware that other areas of the economy needs adequate attention but no nation can develop above its quality of education,” he said.

    ASUU: Fed Govt should resolve ASUU issue

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) University of Lagos (UNILAG) Branch Chairman, Prof. Kayode Adebayo, said the union expects the Federal Government to resolve all outstanding issues, including the ongoing renegotiation of the ASUU- FGN agreement.

    He said: “The expectation is a continuous improvement in the system.  It’s expected that all outstanding issues, including the ongoing renegotiation of the ASUU- FGN agreement, will be resolved. Sanity is expected in the sector; the recklessness in the setting up of new universities must be addressed. Adequate funding of the universities must be a priority of government.”

    NAPTAN: states should create Education Loan Scheme

    Deputy National President National Parent Teacher Association of Nigeria (NAPTAN), Chief Adeolu Ogunbanjo, said: “States/ sub-nationals should also institute a loan scheme for state universities/ institutions. That would prevent NELFUND from being overstretched. It will complement the efforts of the Federal Government because most states’ budgets are below 10 per cent. Education is in this sorry state because political office holders don’t put their children in public schools. Politicians should be made to send their children to public schools as a matter of policy.

    “A lot still needs to be done to improve education. The national government and sub-national governments should increase the budgetary allocation for education. Even if not up to the United States of America standard of 25 per cent; at least they should do 15 per cent. Unfortunately, most of them are below the figure. More funding should be allocated to education.

    “Government should also put in more money into the Students Loan Scheme to accommodate more students. So, the budget should be doubled. Then, only the rich send their children to private schools; the scheme is meant for those in public schools. So, the argument to include private school students doesn’t stand.

    “Beyond that too, there are so many states suffering from lack of school teachers, particularly at secondary level. Government should look into that too.

    “Then, on the ASUU issue, it started since 2009 when former President Goodluck Jonathan approved many things for the lecturers. We are still dealing with the problem because the 2009 agreement is difficult for government to fulfill. Let both parties negotiate and reach an agreement. ASUU should also reach compromises with government. Government should also take caution on its negotiation with ASUU so that other unions too won’t start raising issues. The problem of unions should be solved once and for all in 2025. Compromises should be reached by both parties.

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    Regarding huge electricity bills, the DisCos and universities should also reach an agreement on how to pay; no school should be disconnected. Universities need electricity to survive.”

    NANS seeks reduction in tuition, investment in digital learning

    For the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), government should implement policies to reduce tuition fees and other levies in tertiary institutions and introduce subsidies and tuition-free initiatives where possible.

    In a chat with The Nation, NANS Southwest Secretary General, Oluwole Aboke, urged government to, among other things, invest in digital learning platforms, provide free internet access in schools and incorporate technology in teaching to prepare students for a competitive global economy.

    NANS praised the Federal Government for allocating a record-breaking N3.5 trillion to the education sector in the 2025 national budget, stating that the unprecedented commitment reflects a potential shift towards prioritising education.

    On other areas that need sufficient improvement, Aboke said: “Government should prioritise technical and vocational education by establishing and equipping training centres nationwide to equip students with practical skills and enhance employability.

    “It should fulfill obligations to academic unions, including ASUU, NASU and SSANU, to prevent future strikes and prioritise prompt payment of salaries, allowances and pensions for staff.

    “Government must ensure the N3.5 trillion allocation is disbursed and utilised transparently, and include student representatives in monitoring committees to ensure funds are properly used.”

    The student association also stressed the need to invest in primary and secondary education by recruiting qualified teachers, upgrading infrastructure, and providing essential teaching aids.

     NAUS: shift from certification-oriented education imperative

    While stressing that it has high expectations for education in the new year, the National Association of University Students (NAUS), called for a significant shift from certification-oriented education to one that equips students with practical skills to tackle real-world problems.

    NAUS National Vice President (Southwest) Tiamiyu Ibraheem, who acknowledged the progress made in the education sector, particularly with the Student Loan Scheme, sought a comprehensive review of the education system to ensure relevance, effectiveness and preparation for 21st-century challenges.

    He said: “Our curriculum falls short of 21st-century standards, emphasising the need for rebranding to incorporate problem-solving, artificial intelligence, and innovation. Our expectations for 2025 are high, driven by the National Education Policy. We anticipate increased funding, enhanced digital infrastructure, and initiatives to bridge the digital divide.”

    ASUP expects welfare issues resolved

    President of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) Shammah Kpanja noted that a new Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) reached at a conciliation meeting with the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment on December 9, culminated in the suspension of its warning strike. Thus, the union expects a resolution to the issues when they return to the negotiation table on January 23, 2025.

    He said: “Within the period of the strike, the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment convened a conciliation meeting between our union and the government on the December 9, 2024 to resolve the dispute and save the sector from the impending indefinite strike.

    “At the meeting, a new memorandum of understanding was signed with a caveat that another meeting will be held on January 23, 2025, to assess compliance by parties as well as to address other issues. After this meeting, the union’s National Executive Council will meet to review the situation.”

    CPN: swift action required to tackle out-of- school children issue

    Lagos State Coordinator of the Child Protection Network (CPN), Mrs. Ronke Oyelakin, lamented the number of children who are out-of-school. She described the situation as “worrisome”.

    Oyelakin, who urged government to tackle the issue promptly, highlighted measures that help reduce the number.

    She said: “Governments can build more schools, especially in rural (populated slum and underserved areas). They can also improve transportation networks to make schools more accessible, some LGAs provide free school rides to some students but the number of students to the available vehicles is high. The cost of transportation is high and as such, some parents will prefer to survive first before thinking of education.

    “They should ensure teacher training and professional development to improve the quality of teaching and get to post more teachers to the rural areas. The numbers of teachers available are also not enough. They need to employ more and spread them across the communities. They can also ensure that schools have adequate educational resources. This is a major issue; even the few schools available do not have all the needed teaching aids.

    “The current socio-economic and cultural factors also contribute to out-of-school children. For example, nomadic populations may not be able to attend school due to their permanent migration – movement from one place to another and this can affect schooling of their wards.

    “It is important for governments to educate the public on the importance of education for every child. Collaborating with non-governmental organisations, community-based groups and the private sector to pool resources and expertise for the provision of schools supplies, building or renovation of more schools among others. They should implement programmes like scholarship schemes, school feeding programmes, and conditional cash transfers to encourage children to stay in school.

    “Investment in school infrastructure, including building new schools, providing necessary resources, and hiring qualified teachers, is crucial. It is also essential for governments at all levels to prioritise security and safety of students and ensure safe access to education for all children.

    “Community engagement is a vital strategy in addressing the out-of-school crisis in Nigeria. By leveraging the strengths and insights of local communities, it is possible to develop sustainable and context-specific solutions that improve educational access and quality.”

  • ASUU agonistes

    ASUU agonistes

    In the average Nigerian consciousness, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) is synonymous with struggle: struggle for better standards in the university system and, more engagingly, the welfare of its members. You may not agree with its methods, but there’s no denying that is what it does.

    The union lately opened another flank of its crusading, and it is the growing number of first class graduates produced by Nigerian private universities. ASUU National President, Professor Emmanuel Osodeke, said the “increasing numbers of first class graduates” turned out by private universities gave cause for concern and could result in a decline in genuine academic pursuits, especially if public universities followed suit without proper oversight.

    The ASUU boss spoke at an event organised by the union in celebration of Professor Andy Egwunyenga’s tenure as Vice-Chancellor of Delta State University (DELSU). The event took place penultimate Thursday at DELSU campus in Abraka, Ethiope East council area of Delta. He cited the instance of primary and secondary schools that these days produce pupils with high grades, but with inadequate knowledge, adding that the incidence of building collapse in the country signpost significant issues within the nation’s institutions.

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    Osodeke was on point in flagging the soaring number of ace students being turned out by universities without commensurate developmental strides and touches of ingenuity in the market place. First class degree used to be considered an exclusive club of exceptional students who are naturally potentiated to be scholar themselves, and many of whom used to get retained by their respective school as graduate assistants – an entry point into the academy career from which they take on acquiring further degrees and progress in scholarly cadres up to professorship, if they get that lucky. Only that things aren’t like that anymore, and that is largely because of the unwieldy number of first class graduates being produced. Now we hear of cases like that of a first class graduate of the Umaru Musa Yar’Adua University who was found hawking pure water to support his family until Katsina State Governor Dikko Umaru Radda moved in recently to offer him government employment. 

    But then, Osodeke short-shrifted on identifying the facilitators of the trend he frowned on, namely himself and his fellow academics who function as internal and external examiners of the outputted ace students. One would his observation calls for hard industry introspection and diligent peer review, more than it is a matter of public alarm. In other words, ASUU should call a roundtable of its members, and indeed non-members but who are career academics, and talk through how to tighten professional ethics in promotion of practice standards that would make their best products impact the marketplace and boost Nigeria’s development strides. It is in enlightened self-interest of career educationists to make education relevant in national development.

  • CONUA and ASUU again

    CONUA and ASUU again

    In an effort to ensure stability within the Nigerian University System, a renegotiation committee on the 2009 agreement has been constituted by the federal government. The committee is chaired by Alhaji Yayale Ahmed – a former Minister of Defence, a former Head of Civil Service, a former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, the current Pro-Chancellor of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, and the current Chair of the Committee of Pro-Chancellors of Nigerian Federal Universities (CPCNFU).

    The Congress of University Academics (CONUA) was formed in 2018 in reaction to the constriction of the democratic space within the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). According to CONUA, this tendency became unbearable when, in 2013, the duly-won victory of certain members of ASUU in a free and fair election was annulled by some autocratic forces within the union. Things came to a head in 2018 when over seven hundred members of ASUU were suspended and expelled from the union for expressing their dissatisfaction with the trajectory of the union. The suspended and expelled members came together and formed CONUA on 12 February, 2018, as a means of resistance to peer oppression, and proceeded to apply for registration. The application for registration, dated 30 April, 2018, was submitted on 2 May, 2018 at the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment, Abuja. The union was presented a certificate of registration by the then-Honourable Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, on 17 January, 2023. On 14 December, 2023, the Trade Union Congress announced its admission of CONUA as one of its new affiliates.

    Meanwhile, on 26 October, 2022, ASUU had prematurely filed a suit at the National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN) challenging the registration of CONUA (and the Nigeria Association of Medical Academics – NAMDA). In the suit, it prayed the court to declare the registration illegal, and pleaded for the court to order the withdrawal of the certificates of registration of the two unions. It is important to note here that as at the time ASUU was making this plea, the certificates had actually not yet been issued. On 25 July, 2023, ASUU lost the case and the NICN declared the registration of CONUA and NAMDA legal.

    The NICN judgement was based principally on the provision of Article 2 of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Convention No. 87 which stipulates as follows: “Workers and employers, without distinction whatsoever, shall have the right to establish and, subject only to the rules of the organisation concerned, to join organisations of their own choosing without previous authorisation.” Also noteworthy here is Section 12 (4) of the 2004 Trade Union Act which expressly states: “Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Act, membership of a trade union by employees shall be voluntary and no employee shall be forced to join any trade union or be victimised for refusing to join or remain a member.”On its website, CONUA also referred to Sections 20 and 21 of the 1990 Kampala Declaration on Intellectual Freedom and Social Responsibility which state: “Members of the intellectual community have a responsibility to promote the spirit of tolerance towards different views and positions and enhance democratic debate and discussion. No one group of the intellectual community shall indulge in the harassment, domination or oppressive behaviour towards another group. All differences among the intellectual community shall be approached and resolved in the spirit of equality, non-discrimination and democracy.”

    Regarding the renegotiation committee, CONUA wrote to the then-Minister of Education, Professor Mamman Tahir, and noted that there was an oversight, because the bona fide and duly registered union was not invited to be part of the renegotiation. The union argued that as at the time the 2009 agreement was reached, most of those who constitute CONUA were members of ASUU and were therefore major stakeholders in relation to the agreement. CONUA further noted that since the outcome of the ongoing renegotiation would affect CONUA members, the right thing to do is to include representatives of the union. CONUA also remarked that it was only representatives of the union that could best project and protect its interests.

    In reaction to the CONUA call for inclusivity, the Coordinator of the Lagos Zone of ASUU, Professor Adelaja Odukoya, who has been described as “the Dean of Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Lagos, Akoka,” was reported in a story, titled “You’re not relevant, ASUU knocks CONUA”, by the Nigerian Tribune of 14 November, 2024, to have said: “If they [CONUA] were once part of ASUU as they argued in the media report, they should answer for themselves if they are part of ASUU now? So, they cannot leverage on what they were in the past but what they are now is the in-thing. So, they should wake up from their self-delusion as they have been used and dumped by Ngige.”

    Professor Odukoya was also reported to have said: “And the earlier they realize that unionism etched on opportunism and charlatanism will always end in disgrace and heartbreak. They should realise that they have miscalculated. And if they have any iota of shame and any honour, they would not [broach] the idea of being included in the FGN-ASUU negotiation in whatever form. I particularly for one think that honour is not a commodity they have. And they should stop asking for undue relevance.”

    If indeed Professor Adelaja Odukoya is the Dean of a Faculty at the University of Lagos, this kind of intemperate language, where rational arguments would have sufficed, doesn’t represent the University of Lagos well, and neither does it represent ASUU well. In Yoruba culture, to which he belongs, such conduct would be categorised as that of a white fowl which doesn’t recognise itself as an elder, and so acts out of tune with the honour ascribed to the position. (“Adìe funfun ò mo’ra rè lágbà.”) As things have now turned out, CONUA has begun to match Professor Odukoya and ASUU expletive for expletive.

    Dr. Nasiru Yunusa, the North-West Coordinator and Chairperson of the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, chapter of CONUA, was reported in a story, titled “You have to face new realities, CONUA replies ASUU,” to have said that since the letter pointing out the Ministry of Education’s oversight was not addressed to ASUU, ASUU’s outbursts indicated a refusal to hoe one’s own row. Secondly, CONUA argued that, if it was ab initio eminently qualified for registration in 2018, but the registration was withheld for five long years, and justice finally prevailed in 2023 with its eventual registration, “nothing could … be more asinine than ASUU’s labelling of CONUA’s epochal success as being ‘used and dumped!’” CONUA further castigated Professor Odukoya as follows: “It is indeed a betrayal of deep-thinking scholarship that a university Professor would be ignorantly bleating about ‘unionism etched on opportunism and charlatanism will always end in disgrace and heartbreak.’”

    Moreover, CONUA said it was hypocritical for ASUU to be talking of honour. It asked where ASUU’s honour lay when, in declaring the 2022 strike, the union said the strike would be “total, indefinite, comprehensive and suffocating”; but once the Federal Government invoked the “no work, no pay” rule, ASUU capitulated and claimed that it was only the “teaching” component of its duties that it abandoned during the strike. CONUA was, thus, of the view that ASUU lacked the courage of its convictions. CONUA also noted: “This is a dawn of a new era where our universities are free from the shackles of incessant closures, and ASUU should smell the coffee and get used to the new realities.”

    Meanwhile, some side-players have also joined the fray. For example, in the 18 October, 2024 edition of TVC’s “Journalists’ Hangout”, Babajide Kolade-Otitoju remarked: “CONUA … had complained that their members were oppressed, needlessly punished, under ASUU regime and that this was what caused ASUU to be divided. But when you look at CONUA, if you have to choose between CONUA and ASUU in terms of the number of people that ASUU represents, CONUA literally does not exist beside ASUU. In fact, there are very few … universities where CONUA is present.” First, this is the typical logic of autocrats and oppressors. But, as George Orwell aptly asserts, “Sanity is not statistical.” Second, the argument is akin to rationalising a hypothetical decision, by INEC, not to invite the All Progressives Grand Alliance, Labour Party and New Nigeria People’s Party to meetings to discuss critical political matters that would affect them, just because each of these parties controls only one state, whilst APC controls 21states and PDP controls 12.

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    In the same edition of “Journalists’ Hangout”, dropping all pretence to objectivity, Kolade-Otitoju said about CONUA, in relation to ASUU’s 2022 8-month-long strike and CONUA’s exclusion from the negotiating committee in 2024: “You rebelled against your own colleagues. You were silent as your colleagues fought aggressively against the oppressor. You behaved like you were not seeing what was going on. Now, the same oppressor has decided to sideline you.” Whilst Kolade-Otitoju saw resistance to ASUU’s autocratic and oppressive streak as rebellion, CONUA saw it as acting in line with the exhortation that “Resistance to tyranny is obedience to God.” It is unclear why Babajide Kolade-Otitoju persistently gets so easily worked up and lapses into hubris over the fact that CONUA members have been or are exercising their constitutionally-guaranteed, ILO-sanctioned and court-upheld freedom of association.

    The combination of old positions with new perspectives can only benefit the Nigerian university system. It is in this sense that “Two heads are better than one.” It was therefore wrong for the former Minister of Education, Professor Tahir Mamman, to have excluded CONUA from the renegotiation committee. It is hoped that the current Minister, Dr. Tunji Alausa, would rectify this anomaly, in the interest of equity and the overall interest of university education in the country. The Minister also needs to direct the heads of MDAs under the ministry, such as the National Universities Commission, TETfund and Vice-Chancellors, to accord all registered unions in the university system due recognition and include them in meetings or programmes in which they ought to be major stakeholders.

    The democratic spirit and the intellectual temperament dictate the recognition, acceptance and respect for diversity of choice. It is thus hoped that ASUU would reconcile itself to the reality of the existence of CONUA and sheathe its sword. It is also hoped that CONUA would note that any hostility against it from ASUU and its associates is a passing phase. CONUA should therefore resist being drawn into unnecessary acrimony. Going forward, ASUU and CONUA should begin, consciously, to cultivate mutual respect, while noting that, as a Yoruba proverb says, “There’s enough room in the sky for birds to fly without colliding (Ojú òrun tó eye fò láì fara kan ra.)