Tag: FG

  • ASUU strike: Group urges parents to monitor children, ward

    The National President, National Council for Muslim Youths Organisations (NACOMYO), Alhaji Kamal’din Akintunde, on Wednesday urged parents to monitor the activities of their children and wards during the ongoing ASUU strike.

    He gave the advice in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abeokuta

    Akintunde said that parents should ensure that their children and wards did not engage in anti-social vices during the strike of university lecturers.

    He urged parents to use the period to occupy their children and wards with activities that could be beneficial to their future.

    “If the children are left unchecked, they can be influenced by friends and the environment they live in; this could as well tarnish the family’s image.

    “Parents must ensure that the period of the strike is utilised positively by their children and wards,’’ he said.

    Akintunde said that the students must also prove that they were responsible citizens by shunning temptations and negative peer pressures, adding that they should not allow people to use them to perpetrate evil.

    He urged the students to remain committed to their studies by visiting libraries and engaging in group discussions which could be beneficial to their studies whenever the schools resumed.

    He also urged students’ religious groups to embark on fasting and prayers for the quick resolution of the crisis, which had brought academic activities in the country’s universities to a halt. (NAN)

  • Why we remain on strike, by varsity teachers

    Why we remain on strike, by varsity teachers

    The Federal Government may consider the N100 billion it has released out of the N500 billion for infrastructural projects in 61 universities a big deal but university teachers think otherwise.

    Despite pressure from various quarters that it should manage what the government has offered and end its 74-day old strike, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) is not moved.

    Members of the union in the public universities nationwide are insisting that the Federal Government must honour the agreement by providing the funds according to the timetable and conditions both parties set.

    Ironically, many parents and students interviewed by The Nation seem to be behind ASUU. They are urging the union to ensure they get all that was agreed upon so that there would not be another strike soon.

     

    Journey to 2009

    ASUU/FGN Agreement

    The 2009 agreement was a product of negotiations with successive administrations, beginning in 1992 with that of former military president Gen Ibrahim Babangida. There were also re-negotiations in 1999 (under Gen Abdulsalami Abubakar); and 1999/2001 (under former President Olusegun Obasanjo), until the agreement was signed in 2009 (under the late President Umaru Musa Yar’ Adua).

    ASUU President Dr Nasir Fagge said through the agreement, the union seeks to make universities competitive by ensuring that conditions of service are favourable to academic staff so as to reverse brain drain; provide adequate funding to universities; and ensure their autonomy and academic freedom.

    But, the pact’s implementation has over the years pitched ASUU against the government.

    Two outstanding issues define the ongoing strike: the release of funds accruing up to N500 billion to improve facilities in 61 public universities (27 federal and 34 state); and the non-payment of earned allowances put at N92 billion.

    In response to ASUU demands, the government set up a committee headed by Benue State Governor Gabriel Suswam, to implement the recommendations of the committee on Needs Assessment of Public Universities which submitted its report to the National Economic Council (NEC) last November.

    The 11-man committee chaired by Prof Mahmood Yakubu, former Executive Secretary, Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), in its report, recommended that “Government shall consider the provision of quality infrastructure for teaching and learning in all universities as a national emergency.” The panel noted that the classrooms, laboratories and hostels of the 61 universities had decayed.

    The government released N100 billion for this purpose on August 21, almost two months after the commencement of the strike, to cover construction of classrooms, laboratories and hostels.

    It also announced the release of N30 billion for the earned allowances.

    However, the union is insisting on the full amounts stated in the agreement before calling off the strike.

    Suswam has condemned the union‘s stand, especially as the government has released of some funds to meet part of the demands.

    “There is nothing on the list of their demands that the government has not touched,” Suswam said when he hosted the National Union of Benue State Students last week.

     

    Why ASUU is not impressed

    Some lecturers told The Nation that accepting what the government was offering would only be postponing the evil day because the amount would continue to mount.

    Chairman, ASUU, Cross River University of Technology (CRUTECH), Dr Nsing Ogar accused the government of insincerity. He said the N100 billion the government is paying now should have been released in April last year – with an additional N400 billion this year. He said by 2015 the amount released should be N1.3 trillion.

    He said: “Last year, there was an agreement between the government and ASUU that N100 billion would be injected into the university system to upgrade facilities. It was supposed to be released immediately. The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was signed in January 2012 and by April that sum of money was supposed to have been released. Also in that MoU there was an agreement that in 2013 another N400 billion would be released. Then in 2014 another N400 billion. Then in 2015 another N400 billion. That makes N1.3 trillion to upgrade facilities in the university system. We had tried to talk with government to ensure that these amount were released, they did not accept and that is why we are on strike. And if in 2013 they are releasing N100 billion, there is a shortfall of N400 billion, they have not told us, what next would happen in 2014 and 2015.”

    On his part, Dr. Abdulkadir Mohammed, the branch ASUU chairman, Kano University of Science and Technology, Wudil, said members were irked that the N100 billion was recycled from the universities’ funds.

    He said: “Even the N100 billion that the government is talking about, there is a recommendation of the Technical Committee on how the N100 billion should be disbursed, that has been breached by government. Secondly, Nigerians should know the source of the N100 billion because our MoU with the government clearly stated that this money should be sourced outside state fund; that government should scout for the N1.3 trillion from other sources outside the Tertiary Education Trust Fund but we realised that the government is trying to do now is to go and block all the money in the state fund, mop it up and channel it into financing the recommendation of the need assessment and that is also not acceptable.

    “The union would not accept the effort by the government to mop the money belonging to universities within the Education sector for this purpose. The agreement is that they should scout for money elsewhere to finance this agreement and therefore if they fail to do that, this crisis will not abate.”

    Dr David Nanson Jangkam, Chairman of the University of Jos (UNIJOS) ASUU Chapter, said the N30 billion the government paid as earned allowances was just a third of the debt it owes the lecturers.

    “Let me tell you the level of insincerity of the government, the earned allowance, they are owing us is N92 billion, out of which the government has offered N30 billion, this is one-third of what they are owing us. Regarding the so called N100 billion they claimed to have approved for need assessment, they are taking that fund from the TETFund, which means they are robbing the university to pay the university,” he said.

     

    Parents support ASUU’s struggle

    Contrary to expectations, many parents interviewed by The Nation urged ASUU to ensure the government fulfils its promise this time so that there would be no strikes in future resulting from the present issues.

    Mr. Lawal Morakinyo, a business man whose son attends the University of Ibadan (UI), said the N100 billon does not even scratch the surface of the problem.

    “The N100 billion does not solve the problem because the school laboratories and the other situation have been on ground for many years and if they (ASUU) had been persistent in the sight of the government it wouldn’t be as grave as this. The money they are putting on ground is not an issue; we have seen cases like this. The money the government is giving is just a waiver – that I am giving you this money to keep your mouth shut and stop your ASUU strike,” he said.

    Another parent, Mr Fidelis Inde, who resides in Calabar, the Cross River State Capital, said he was not happy his children are at home. yet, he supports the strike because he believes the government can indeed meet ASUU’s demands.

    “Although our children staying at home is not in the best interest of anybody, but I believe the right thing should to be done. If there was an agreement, then that agreement should be honoured. I believe it is high time we stopped cutting corners in doing things. It would not turn out well for us in the long run, if we continue like that. What the people have demanded is not impossible to achieve. You just don’t dangle N100 billion before ASUU when you know that was not the initial agreement. It is important for ASUU not to set a bad precedent and ensure the agreement is honoured to the letter. Government, I believe can meet ASUU’s demands if it is sincere.”

    A trader in Akure the Ondo State Capital, Mrs Margaret Okeke, who has two children in the Adekunle Ajasin University at Akungba-Akoko (AAUA) in Ondo State, recalled that the government and ASUU face off had been rocking the education sector since the late President Yar’Adua administration, urging President Goodluck Jonathan to find a lasting solution to the problem.

    She urged the lecturers to shun appeals to resume when their demands have not been met.

    “Urging University lecturers to resume work is just like suspension of a battle that must be fought. The issue of the strike had been lingering on for so long in the higher institution and this is because the government has failed to implement the 2009 agreement it has with the workers.

    “If the ASUU should call off the strike, it will someday return to the battle field with the government since its demands have not been met. I think the government should fulfil its own part of the agreement. The PDP-led government spent more money on its convention, President’s wife’s women’s rally. It can easily dash out billions of naira to some dubious politicians in order to secure or remain in power. We can see and hear how they share the “National Cake” with their families and friends leaving us to grow in abject poverty.”

    Pastor Andrew Ayinloge, who stays in Akure, urged the government to curb waste elsewhere and meet the union’s demands.

    He said: “I will advise ASUU to go on with the strike until the government is ready to fulfil the agreement because if they should call off the strike and its demands are not met, they will one day go back to the strike.

    “Nigeria is rich enough to pay the workers. Let the government reduce the allowances of senators, governors, commissioners, House of Representatives and State Assemblies members if that will bring the solution to end the issue of strike in Nigeria.”

    Mr Remi Agunbiade, another parent agrees Nigeria is rich enough.

    He said: “If you look at the history of ASUU problem or history of education in Nigeria these are all the tricks government is using, ASUU demands for something, they will give them part of it and ask them to go back so it is still better for government to do the right thing at the right time. N100 billion is nothing to write home about when you consider the decay in infrastructure in our system; there is nothing N100 billion can do.

    “Mere organising PDP convention they will spend more than 100 billion so let the government do the right thing and solve the problem once-and-for-all, and I as a person I cannot blame government and I cannot blame ASUU. Why I cannot blame government is that most of their children are in private schools or overseas. So the children of the poor masses are in government schools. So the government officials don’t feel the pain.”

    A Lagos-based parent, Mr Abiodun Phillips, said he does not believe that the government has even released the N100 billion. “They are saying that they have approved the money but I don’t believe. That was how they signed an agreement in 2009 and they didn’t keep to it,” he said.

    Some parents are appealing to ASUU to suspend the strike for the students’ sake.

    Abraham Dalyop, a resident of Jos, Plateau State, said ASUU should give the government a chance.

    “Since the government and ASUU are discussing how to solve the issues, ASUU can suspend the strike and continue with negotiation. There is no point insisting on contnuing the strike; it is not healthy for our children,” he said.

    Another parent, Obinna Nwosu, who resides in Nnewi, described the situation as preposterous. His three children at home when they should be busy with their academic work. He appealed to ASUU to consider going back to their duty posts and urged the government to ensure that the agreement is kept.

     

    Students for and against

    Some students support the strike, while others are against it.

    Julius Ona a 300-level undergraduate of English University of Ibadan said he is for the strike but does not believe government will yield ground.

    “Though I see ASUU demands as genuine, but is it not possible to appeal to ASUU to accept the N100 billion now and continue negotiation later? Nobody in this country should pretend not to know government attitude to public education. ASUU demands had been for long and if government still turns a deaf ear, why should they believe government would answer now?”

    The President of National Association of Ondo State Students, Comrade Afolayan Awoloda advised the lecturers to remain on strike until the government fulfil its promise.

    He noted that the government was not blindfolded before signing the agreement in 2009, stressing that President Jonathan’s action has dealt a big blow to education at the international level.

    Awodola said: “Mr president should prove to Nigerians that he is worthy of leading us and stop embarrassing the nation. I still maintain that if there has been an agreement since 2009 and there has not been any modality on ground to fulfil the sealed agreement.

    I think ASUU, should remain on strike till the government fulfill diligently the content of the agreement since the government was not under duress or blindfolded when it signed the agreement.

    But, the National Association of Nigerian Student’s (NAN’s) representative in Akure, Gbenga Ayenuro appealed to the lecturers to resume in order to save the future of Nigerian students. The strike, he said, had rendered the students idle at home, warning that such act is dangerous to the country’s future.

    “NANS appeals to both ASUU and Federal Government to work towards resolving the present ASUU strike that has kept Nigerian students at home for over two months.

    “We are not happy with the way both parties are playing with the life and future of innocent Nigerian students. They have rendered us useless being at home, caused us hardship to survive and our parents to cater for us and caused more havoc by exposing Nigerian Students to social vices most especially our ladies.

    “At this point, we urge ASUU to shift ground for the sake of Nigerian Students and return to the classroom while deliberation continues on the earned allowance claims and we also appeal to the government to reconsider ASUU earned allowance claims.”

    A student of UNIJOS, Monday Philemon said: “We know our lecturers are fighting a genuine cause but they should consider that they will ruin the future of students if the strike lasts longer than this. These lectures are holders of master and PhD certificates, most of them are professors, so they dot care much about going to school again but we are in school and we also need to acquire the certificates they have acquired, they should not frustrate us please, the government has done enough.”

  • Fed Govt to states: use mass literacy to curb vices

    The Federal Government has urged state governments to invest in mass literacy programmes.

    Minister of State for EducationNyesom Wike said this would stem the tide of insecurity, poor health conditions and other social vices .

    He spoke yesterday at a news conference to mark the international literacy day in Abuja.

    He urged members of the National Assembly to invest in mass literacy and non formal education as part of their constituency projects.

    The minister said: “A literate community will be difficult to manipulate by mischief makers to increase the level of insecurity in parts of the country. It must be stated that once someone is literate, he will comprehend several societal issues and act in line with ways that would promote national development.

    “You hear several states declare that they have made education a top priority, yet they pay little attention to a huge percentage of illiterate adults. Our states must begin to focus more on ways of improving the literacy levels in the respective communities.

    “The importance of literacy speaks for itself. Literacy as we all know is one of the solutions to our national challenges of insecurity, poverty, poor health conditions among others. Indeed the embarrassing literacy statistics on Nigeria justifies the need for every stakeholder to redouble his/her effort.”

    Wike said there are 35 million illiterate adults and 10.5 million out-of-school children.

    UNESCO Country Representative Prof. Hassana Alidou, who read the UNESCO Director- General’s address, described literacy as an investment in the future. She said that literacy is the key to the acquisition of knowledge, inter-personal skills, expertise and the ability to live together in a community.

    Executive Secretary of National Commission for Mass Literacy, Adult and Non-Formal Education Alhaji Jibrin Paiko said the Northeast, North west and Northcentral have the highest number of illiterates in the country, urging the state governments to collaborate with the commission to execute programmes that would address the literacy challenges facing the people.

  • NANS calls on FG, ASUU to end feud

    The Rivers State  chapter of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) on Monday called on the Federal Government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to end their feud.

    The leader of the group, Mr Jonas Adokiye, who made the appeal while addressing government house officials in Port Harcourt, said the lingering strike was doing harm to students.

    He said the strike had turned most of the students into armed robbers and prostitutes, noting that some students had engaged themselves in various kinds of criminal activities, due to idleness.

    The unionist urged well-meaning Nigerians to prevail on ASUU and the Federal Government to return to the negotiation table.

    Adokiye who is also the Director of Action and Mobilisation of NANS, also called for the appointment of a senior special assistant to the governor to oversee student matters.

    He pleaded with the Rivers Government to also provide buses to ease movement of students in Rivers, appealing  for the payment of bursary to students.

    The Permanent Secretary in the Rivers State Government House, Mr Fortune Oguru, commended the group for conducting themselves peacefully.

    He appealed to students to be patient, promising to pass their message to the governor, whom he said, was away on official assignment.

    Oguru assured the students that the outcome of the negotiations between government and ASUU would ensure better learning and teaching. (NAN)

  • Aturu to FG: Implement pact with ASUU

    Aturu to FG: Implement pact with ASUU

    Lagos lawyer, Bamidele Aturu, has said that the only way to rescue higher education in Nigeria is for the Federal Government to begin the immediate implementation of the pact it voluntarily reached with the Academic Staff Union of Universities.

    He said that unless the agreement is respected, higher education is doomed in Nigeria.

    Aturu made the declaration in a statement issued in Lagos on Tuesday titled: “Implementation of FGN-ASUU agreement-the only way to save higher education in Nigeria.”

    “We may have to return to the suggestion made by Prof. Wole Soyinka many years ago that we should close down all the universities and declare a state of emergency.

    “When the sage first made that suggestion it looked unrealistic and alarmist. Now, it is clear that we are pretending to have higher education.

    “What takes place in our dilapidated universities is little better than kindergarten education, if we must be honest with ourselves,” he noted.

    Aturu remarked that it was unacceptable that government should attempt to bully ASUU to accept its offers.

    He observed that the expenditure profile of the government and politicians does not show that government is unable to meet the financial requirements of the agreement.

    He pointed out that in a country where politicians buy private jets at will and send their children to private primary schools overseas, only the politicians would believe the lie that government cannot afford to fund higher education in the manner requested by ASUU-FG agreement.

     

  • Editors want FG to diversify economy

    Editors want FG to diversify economy

    The Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) has urged the Federal Government to embark on sustained diversification of the nation’s economy in a bid to free it from further dependence on oil and gas.

    The call was contained in a seven-point communiqué signed by the NGE Secretary, Isaac Ighure, at the end of a four-day conference held in Asaba, Delta, from August 21 to August 24.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the 9th All Nigerian Editors’ Conference with the theme, “Nigeria Beyond Oil: Role of the Editor,’’ was chaired by a one-time Ogun Governor, Chief Olusegun Osoba.

    The guild suggested that agriculture, tourism and other non-oil sources should be “intensively explored to avert the catastrophic consequences of a future without oil.”

    The statement said financial institutions and funding agencies should provide increased funding to non-oil sectors, especially agriculture, small and medium enterprises and manufacturing.

    “It is imperative for Nigeria to embark on deliberate and sustained diversification of its economy, weaning itself from dependence on oil and gas as a major revenue earner.

    “There should be an integrated approach to diversification of the economy by involving all sectors, curbing corruption and wastage, and improving governance to ensure the survival of the country beyond oil.’’

    The editors also called on the government to fast track efforts toward improving infrastructure, particularly in the power sector, transportation and telecommunications.

    They stressed the need for the country to add value to oil and gas resources through the production of by-products for local consumption and export.

     

  • ASUU/FG: FG releases N130bn for infrastructure, allowances

    ASUU/FG: FG releases N130bn for infrastructure, allowances

    THE Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Chief Pius Anyim,yesterday announced the release of N30 billion to 61 universities in the country for execute projects and pay of allowances. Chief Anyim,at a meeting in Abuja with Pro-Chancellors and Vice Chancellors of Public Universities said N100 billion is to settle infrastructure deficits while N30 billion is for payment of allowances to university staff. Government,according to him, has fulfilled much of the agreement it entered into in 2009 with ASUU. He said: “From the foregoing, it is obvious that the Federal Government has demonstrated sufficient commitment to the implementation of the 2009 FG/ASUU (Academic Staff Union of Universities) Agreement. “By this, it is clear demonstration of commitment to revitalise the university system, government hereby, urges every staff of the nation’s universities to return to work as all issues are being resolved.’’

  • ASUU withdraws from negotiations with FG

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities on Thursday announced its disengagement from further negotiations with the Federal Government, over what it describes as the latter’s perceived insincerity in the 2009 agreement as well as the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) both parties signed in January last year.

    The union National President, Dr. Nassir Faggae Isa, said at a press briefing held at the University of Lagos on Thursday that the 2009 agreement and the MoU must first be honoured, even if ASUU feels the need to consider renegotiation with the government.

    The union had embarked on a total strike on July 2 over government‘s failure to honour the 2009 agreement.

    Faggae said, “Consequently, our members are left with no other choice than to prosecute this strike to its logical conclusion. ASUU members nationwide are saying this striker will not be suspended until and unless the government respects the 2009 agreement and makes concrete efforts to implement it in the best interest of the country.”

    According to him, during a meeting held between ASUU and the government representative on Monday, government declared that it neither had any motive to revitalize public universities through committed funding, nor was it ready to pay in full the accumulated Earned Academic Allowances between 2009 and 2013.

     

  • House committee urges FG, ASUU to end impasse

    House committee urges FG, ASUU to end impasse

    The House of Representatives Committee on Education on Wednesday appealed to the Federal Government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities to end the prolonged strike.

    The committee also eulogised the Vice-Chancellor, Federal University, Otuoke, Prof. Mobolaji Aluko, for his efforts to establish the new institution on a good footing.

    Members of the committee led by its Chairman, Mr. Aminu Suleiman, were in Otuoke, Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, to monitor the progress and challenges of the new university.

    Suleiman said the committee’s ongoing tour of the federal universities across the country was part of its oversight function of tracking funds contained in the budget.

    He lamented that the industrial action by ASUU had persisted but appealed to the union and the government to quickly resolve their areas of differences.

    He said the two committees on education in the National Assembly had earlier facilitated the dialogue between ASUU and the government.

    Going by the steps taken so far by the government, he expressed optimism that the strike would soon be called off by ASUU.

    Recalling the intervention of the committees, he said: “As an institution we are doing the best we could do to ensure the resolution of the strike.

    “Government through the facilitation of the National Assembly had a series of meeting with ASUU. When ASUU issued the ultimatum, government was reluctant to meet with them.

    “It was at the instance of the National Assembly that we summoned the Secretary to the Government of the Federation alongside the Minister of Labour and Minister of Education and we impressed it upon the government to meet with ASUU. Thereafter we allowed the two parties to go ahead with their negotiation.”

    On the Otuoke University, he said members of the committee were excited at the institution’s progress after touring the library, hostels, administrative blocks and other facilities.

     

     

  • FG Vs. ASUU: The game goes on

    What has consistently escaped most Nigerians in this entire travesty is the fact that mediocrity destroys the very fabric of a country…ushering in all sorts of banality, ineptitude, corruption and debauchery. That…is precisely where Nigeria finds itself today! —Chinua Achebe

     

     

    Since the beginning of yet another strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities ASUU last month, which not surprisingly has entered its second month, one wonders when we as a nation would remove ourselves form this wanton mortification of making the education a laughing stock among comity of nations. The question all stakeholders enmeshed in this opprobrium should be asking is whether something fundamental is not wrong with our collective consciousness, else, how come that in every two to three years, the news of ASUU demanding that its overlords in Abuja implement an agreement both entered into and which in turn leads to a painful strike, reverberates the whole nation?

    Are we lacking in foresight as to understand that the Nigerian universities are dying gradually? Have we looked around to ask ourselves why the nation, whose youth out-numbers the old and very young, cannot remove itself from the shackles of societal malfeasance and hold forth the appellation: “we are the future leaders of tomorrow” by taking their destinies into their hands? For as long as the Nigerian youth accepts redundancy, fails to think for himself, cannot see where the rain began to beat him or take the bull by the horn, like many of their counterparts in developed nations, then it will be succinct to claim that the education sector which is supposed to train, build, inculcate, mould and educate vibrant youths against the morrow have failed in its entirety to bequeath such for a people who will take up the reigns of leadership from the old guards, a fault which is not theirs anyway.

    If ASUU once again and for the umpteenth time has called for a strike, it is not because they do not see the peck in their own eyes, as it is evidently known that their own house is also not in order, but because from the very first day government whose responsibility is to pay very good attention to the education sector keeps faltering and reneging on agreements she entered into. For many who are of the belief that ASUU has no reason or justification to embark on this strike which has become one too many in recent times, they must understand that though it may look more like Oliver Twist asking for more, in the situation our education sector finds itself, once and for all, drastic measures ought to be taken in ensuring we do not become a pointer to ridicule anywhere in the world anymore.

    If we have to look well enough the reason ASUU had decided embark on this strike and we feel the shame our universities have put up with, especially if we have to balance it with the education the likes of our parents had in the 60s, 70s and 80s and the pitiable ones our children have today, we then must understand ASUU’s pain and anger. Nobody likes to strike, nobody wishes to allow it take so long, in fact, it is not a good story to tell in our nascent democracy. Yet when a country is bequeathed with leaders who have no foresight, lack understanding of the socio-political terrain, remain clueless in tackling simple political arithmetic, and is occupied with how to remain in power until 2090, then strike becomes an option and a weapon to bring such government to its senses.

    Many Nigerians cannot understand how we practice democracy in the country. Democracy and good governance go hand in hand and therefore, policies embarked upon by one government or the other must necessary be a continuum and should not shift unless necessary. One finds it very difficult to grasp well the story peddled by this government that the agreement it voluntarily entered into in 2009 with ASUU should be re-negotiated. It is the worst of arguments this writer has heard in decades and one wonders if this government is truly committed to transforming the education sector, if the so called campaign promise in 2011 is anything to go by. One would have thought the government of the day should have put forward the same argument during negotiations with the Nigerian Labour Congress NLC in the last subsidy protest. Perhaps, the vast majority of Nigerians wouldn’t be where they are today looking weary, fatigued and hopeless in the midst of plenty.

    Even if government in its usual volte-face had thought the agreement needed to be re-negotiated, why didn’t it bring it to ASUU’s table long before the latter deemed it fit to embark on its ignoble strike? From this, there is no disputing the fact that there is so much insincerity among those in power and it is the reason the vast majority of Nigerians do not trust their leaders.

    It is an irony that the education sector, more than ever, faces this type of humiliation, especially when the president of this country was once a university teacher and his minister of education, a professor in a vibrant field of academic study. No country in its right senses would have such individuals in power and watch as rot engulfs their education sector. With leaders like that who cannot engineer viable transformations within the sector they once held sway, we cannot but feel sorry for the entire country.

    Our universities are no more role models for other countries to follow. Even the so called first generation universities have lost it, while mediocrity reigns supreme in the new ones. Individuals who lack the capacity to teach or engage in ground-breaking discoveries now fill our faculties and departments. Students who lack the intellectual vigour to learn now fill our departments with little or no capacity to communicate, write or engage their lecturers in intellectual debates. Most worrisome is the fact that one cannot find viable tools to hold experiments in our respective laboratories, reminding one of the total neglect in our secondary school laboratories. The structures which the Sardauna, Azikiwe and Awolowo had patriotically erected over 48 years ago still stand rickety today with nothing to show for a better one or even critical repair of the old. One could count the number of ICT-driven universities in the country and if one is lucky to find any, the structure is not enough to train students who are supposed to have pre-requisite knowledge of the ICT world like their counterparts elsewhere.

    Our classrooms have become a national embarrassment where students now sit on windows and outside to receive lectures. University libraries are littered with books the like of Isaac Newton had used during his time yet librarians are employed year in and out without any innovation coming from them to transform their departments into world class. It is most saddening that more than 80 Nigerian universities cannot boast of a state-of-the-art library where students can get up-to-date books to embark on their research. It is no wonder that even reference materials used for PhD thesis today are as old as the country itself, when new materials have been churned out by the same author over five times. Most PhD thesis today appears unconstructive, lack coherence and almost adds nothing to problem-solving. A don once pathetically noted that there are a lot of questionable PhD’s today in Nigeria.

    We seem to forget that strikes in our ivory towers have lasting implications for the future direction of the country. A medical student who is supposed to spend seven uninterrupted years in medical school suddenly faces a three month strike in his quest to become a medical doctor. At the end, he spends about eight to nine years for a seven year medical programme and is in turn given license to practice thereafter. If we do not know, we have bred a murderer and with his shaky training as a medical doctor in the murky world of medical school as a result of incessant ASUU strikes, we are bound to find our loved ones at their mercy. God help us if they survive with the way things keep going in this country!

    If we continue to pretend as if all is well, we will only find ourselves to blame if not now then tomorrow, as the future does not even hold anything to cheer about.

    • Oluwafuminiyi, writes from Lagos.