Tag: LASU

  • ASUU issues seven-day ultimatum to LASU

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Lagos State University (LASU) chapter, on Thursday said it had given the institution a seven-day final ultimatum to address its demands.
    The Chairman of the union, Dr. Adekunle Idris, who made this known to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos, said the ultimatum became effective on April 30 and would expire on May 7.

    NAN reports that the union had on March 24, issued a 21- day ultimatum, which expired on April 13 and another 14-days from April 15 that expired on April 29.
    The union had contended that the hike in fee had accounted for drop in student enrolment in the institution.
    The lecturers also expressed dissatisfaction over the “no vacancy, no promotion” policy of the university and the non-implementation of the 2009 University Miscellaneous Provision Act, already operational in other universities.
    In the fresh deadline, Idris told NAN that the lecturers would embark on a comprehensive and indefinite strike if management continued to ignore the union.
    Idris said the fresh ultimatum was another opportunity for the university to meet the union’s demands, and decried the management’s nonchalant attitude toward the issues.
    He said the institution’s governing council, which was their employer, had not invited the union for dialogue since the initial trade dispute was declared.
    “It was only the Chancellor, Sir Okoya Thomas, that invited us for a meeting towards the end of the initial 21-day ultimatum issued and he promised to bring the issue to a logical conclusion, we are yet to hear from him.
    “The parents’ forum also met the union on April 29 and promised to discuss with the government not to allow the issue result into a strike,’’ he said.

  • ‘Agric requires fresh finance’

    ‘Agric requires fresh finance’

    If the agricultural sector is to remain viable, then the injection of new finance is necessary, an expert, Prof Martins Antekhai, has said.

    Speaking with The Nation, Antekhai,a former Dean, Faculty of Science, Lagos State University (LASU), said the sector is confronting the need for increasing investment to confront challenges.

    These challenges include: inadequate infrastructural development, technology transfer and food security.

    To resolve them, he maintained required increased investment.

    Urging the government to encourage investment to foster growth in food processing, livestock and fisheries, Antekhai stressed the need to establish infrastructure to enable farmers to get more involve in agric exports.

    This, he added, would enable the industry grow and build the capacity of producers to compete at the international market place.

    For the sector to be stabilised, the don stressed that the government should recognise the importance of the sector and give impetus to its development through implementing special initiatives.

    Such growth initiatives, he added, should focus on investment and finance for production, processing, and logistics, including increasing the competitiveness of the value chains in ways that foster broad-based and sustained economic growth.

    Antekhai called for more lending to agriculture, forestry, husbandry and fishery industries and increase credit for infrastructure construction, technology research and development, as well as the development of new types of business entities.

    On the other hand, he called on commercial farmers, traders, input suppliers, agro-processors and transnational agribusinesses to contribute to a system of investment that can help rural people reap profits from agricultural production, marketing and trade.

     

  • LASU lecturers threaten strike after ultimatum

    LASU lecturers threaten strike after ultimatum

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, Lagos, chapter threatened yesterday to go on strike at the expiration of another 14-day ultimatum it declared on April 15.

    The union made the declaration at its Southwest zonal congress at the institution.

    Dr Adesola Nasir, ASUU Southwest Zonal Coordinator, said the ultimatum was effective from April 15.

    “The 14-day ultimatum trade dispute had been issued to accord the management an opportunity to address the demands of the union.

    “ASUU would be holding its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting at the expiration of the ultimatum and ASUU-LASU will embark on a full scale strike, if its demands are not met,” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that ASUU- LASU, on March 25, declared a 21-day ultimatum trade dispute, following the non-implementation of some agreements reached with its management over 12 months ago.

    Nasir said ASUU, at the national level, intervened to resolve the crisis in the university through dialogue with the management.

    He stressed that the issue was being handled with levity by the institution’s authorities.

    “The national level had tried to arrest the trouble that is about to erupt at LASU.

    “But the university authority says there are lots of demands they cannot resolve, except with the aid of the state government,” Nasir said.

    The union leader said the university authority had not met the demands of the lecturers but engaged in propaganda against the union.

    He said the union, as a conscience of the nation, would not allow the hike in fees in the institution to remain.

    “Student enrolment drops yearly due to the hike in fees, ranging from N197, 000 to N350,000.

    “The annual enrolment in 2011/2012 , before the increment was 3,052, but it dropped to 1,119 in the 2013/2014 admission,” he said.

    According to him, the ‘no vacancy, no promotion’ policy had also not been addressed by the university’s management.

    He saidsuch policy would stagnate the progress of the staff members.

    Nasir said: “The management, saying promotion was ongoing, was being economical with the truth. Those who are due and qualified for promotion, there is no vacancy for them, and are not promoted.”

    He noted that ASUU-LASU may be denied the over N2 billion Needs Assessment intervention fund, because the available facilities had been under-utilised.

    “LASU is far behind the recommended National University Commission (NUC) carrying capacity for universities, as available facilities are under-utilised.

    “The university has at least 6,000 carrying capacity, but is now carrying 1, 500,” the official said.

    Nasir advised the authorities to implement the 2012 University Miscellaneous Provision (Amendment) Act by the Federal Government, to discontinue the continuous retirement of staff in the professorial cadre.

    He urged the management, governing council and the government to do the needful in the matter, so that peace and industrial harmony could be restored in the university.

    Meanwhile, the authorities of the institution had on April 14 urged the union to embrace peace, as efforts were being made to meet their demands.

    The management, in a statement by the Public Relations Officer, Mr Kayode Sutton, said there were only three demands, out of the initial 20 of the union, that had not been met.

    It said the government had dealt with the issue of salary arrears by paying its part, while the university had also been paying its own part.

    “The schedule of paying the balance has already been announced and will be honoured,’’ the statement said.

  • LASU fees: Calling on Fashola

    LASU fees: Calling on Fashola

    In the last couple of years, students of the Lagos State University (LASU) have had to contend with increment in tuition fee. But by calling for superior arguments and proposal in order to reduce the fee is, however, a testament to the fact that the state government is not inflexible to change.

    Following series of crises that rocked the school, the Lagos State House of Assembly, in 2011, passed a resolution, which led to setting up of a Visitation Panel by the state executive to look into all issues that nearly tore the state-owned institution apart.

    In its report, the panel made far-reaching recommendations that could help the government take the school to the next level. Unfortunately, in the implementation of the panel’s report, the government carefully selected those recommendations that favoured it alone.

    For instance, in Section 4, Term of Reference (iii), and Section 4.0.2 paragraph (g), where the panel recommended that there should be an “increase in the budgetary allocation to the university, using the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) benchmark of a minimum of 25 per cent of annual budget of the state to be expended on education”.

    Given the social status of the panel members, the “outrageous fee” we are asked to pay could be afforded in multiple folds by these people. None of them belongs to the so-called middle class; their children are studying in world top universities. Meanwhile, LASU is a school for the average man’s children.

    The law setting up LASU stipulates in Section 3 (f) that the school must “provide access for citizens of the state in particular to higher education regardless of social origin or income”. It is suffice to say that the law, in effect, states that LASU must be a school for all manners of people, without prejudice to social status or economic income.

    With the increasing population of Lagos, we have more than six million prospective undergraduates every year, even when the tertiary institutions cannot accommodate more than 700, 000 students. LASU is out of the reach of the people because it is not affordable for the poor.

    I want to consider everything that was summed up before they arrived at N193,750, N223,750, N248, 750 and N348,750 for students of Arts and Education, Social and Management Sciences, Law and College of Medicine respectively.

    Going by the breakdown, the fees cannot be justified. For instance, Teaching Practice, which students of the in Faculty of Education will undergo, is fixed for N15,000. This is a service to be rendered by students to public secondary schools in Lagos. It is just like house job which medical students undergo after their training. They are paid during the period. This same thing should apply to students taking Teaching Practice; they meant to be paid for rendering the service to the state. But government says the students should pay it.

    The University of Helsinki in Finland is ranked first in the country and 76th in the world; yet it is tuition-free for student. Maybe the state government wants to tell us it is subsidising education of students in LASU with N 700,000.

    If a private university can charge N450,000 to include feeding and accommodation for a year, then LASU is expensive at N350, 000 tuition fee without benefit of accommodation and feeding. However, LASU is not a private institution. It is a public facility that is meant to serve the people and not to be profit-making. Therefore, the fee hike is unjustitiable.

    On enrolment trend, before now, LASU used to be a university of first choice. At present, the reverse is the case. The enrolment trend has dropped drastically from 4,570 in 2006 to 1,416 students in 2014.

    In 2013/14 enrolment list, only one student applied to study Physical Education. The same thing goes for French, Fisheries and Aquatic Biology and Physics, which had less than three students applying. This trend can reduce students’ population in the school from 24,000 to 6,000 next session.

    From the above analogy, the government will pay dearly for it. Resources that can be used to effectively train 4,500 students are used to train 1,000 students. As studentship drops, it doubles the cost incurred per student. Assuming the government spends N700,000 on 2,000 students, the cost will increase to N1.4 million, if the number of students drops to 1,000. Whereas, the school is entitled to 5,000 students from National Universities Commission (NUC) quota.

    Abraham Lincoln said: “If you run away from responsibility, you will be held responsible.” For Lagos not to be held responsible for impending illiteracy, the government must stand up to the responsibility of making LASU affordable for Lagosians. With the outrageous fee, dreams of thousands of youths have been shattered. One day, these youths would ask for their rights; so Lagos State must begin to invest heavily in security system.

    The Students’ Union as the representative of the students, wants the progress of this great citadel of learning. But we say “no to fee increment” because Lagos is the third largest city in Africa after Cairo and Kinshasa; and the sixth emerging mega city in the world. With this, it is richer than many African countries.

    Mr. Bode Augusto, the Pro-chancellor, said: “The increment is not enough to pay salaries for three months because LASU needs N900,000,000 a month to survive.” Also, when Dr Obafemi Hamzat, Commissioner for Works, was on campus to inspect on-going projects, the Vice-Chancellor, Prof John Obafunwa, noted: “The infrastructural development in LASU has nothing to do with the fee hike.”

    Now, why the fee hike?

    Wilfred Pareto famously noted that a change that makes at least one individual better off and makes no individual worse off, is an improvement in social welfare. Making LASU a school for the rich must not deprive the poor access to higher education. To this maxim, we submit.

     

    Nurudeen is the Students’ Union president-elect, LASU

  • Ahmadiyya youths for  convention

    Ahmadiyya youths for convention

    YOUTHS of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Nigeria (Majlis Khuddam-ul-Ahmadiyya), will meet tomorrow at the St. Peters Unity Secondary School, Oba Adesida Road, Akure, Ondo State capital, to reflect on the state of the nation, especially as it concerns the youth.

    The annual convention, with the theme: “100 years of Nigeria: Concerns on youth development,” will end on Sunday.

    In a statement, the body’s national president, Abdul-Uadri Abdul-Rafi, said discussions would underscore the role of youths as crucial agents in national development.

    A lecturer at the Department of Foreign Languages, Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, Dr Saheed Olurotimi Timehin, will deliver the lead paper. Mr Raji Ashmowiyy, a lawyer, he said, would also speak on “The role of Nigerian youths in making 2015 elections free and fair.”

     

  • LASU: Open letter to Fashola

    SIR: The Lagos State University (LASU) fee hike is the greatest challenge we have been faced with in the last decade. Calling for superior arguments and proposals for the reduction is a testament to the fact that the government of Lagos State is not inflexible to change.

    Following the seemingly endless crisis in LASU in 2011, the Lagos State House of Assembly had passed a resolution subsequent to which Governor Babatunde Fashola set-up a visitation panel to look into all the issues that nearly tore LASU apart. In the report of the visitation panel, recommendations were made to the government on the way forward. Unfortunately, government was selective on those that favoured her alone. A classical example is in Section 4.0, Term of Reference (iii), particularly at Section 4.0.2 paragraph (g) where the panel recommended “increase in the budgetary allocation to the university using the UNESCO benchmark of a minimum of 25% of annual budget on education”.

    In the law establishing LASU, Section 3 sets out the objectives thus: (f) “To provide ready access for citizens of the state in particular to higher education regardless of social origin or income”.  In other words, LASU is meant for the people of the state without prejudice to their socio-economic status.

    Thirty years ago, the Lagos State government under Chief Lateef Jakande established LASU. The party in government then was the Unity Party Nigeria (UPN). This was a party whose linear ideological ancestor was Action Group led by late Obafemi Awolowo. By the time of the Second Republic, the idea of the free education was no longer restricted to primary education, but also to secondary and tertiary education.

    In a state where the per capita income of an average Lagosian is around $100 per month (approximately N16,700), how do we expect the wards of poor people to access tertiary education, when in reality, a degree is not nearly enough to earn good livelihood?

    I will want to quickly digress a little to consider some of the items that were summed up in the fee of N193,750, N223,750, N248,750 and N348,750 for Arts/Education, Social and Management sciences, Law and College of Medicine respectively to show why the fees, going by the breakdown, cannot be justified. For instance in Faculty of Education, Teaching Practice is N15,000. You may wish to know that teaching practice is a service rendered by students to public secondary schools in Lagos. Like Housemanship by medical students, we are meant to be paid for rendering these services and not pay for rendering it.

    We make bold to aver that there is no correlation between price and quality of education. The University of Helsinki, Finland is first in Finland and 76th in the world and it is tuition free. In any case, if a private university can charge N 450,000 to include feeding and accommodation for a year, then LASU is costly compared to private schools for charging N350, 000 without accommodation and feeding.

    We must constantly bear at the back of our minds that LASU is not a private university. It is a public entity meant to serve the people and not for profit making. Therefore, the fee hike is unjust for the reason that LASU was created to bridge the gaps between all classes in society.

    Harvard is a private institution; let us stop comparing LASU with Harvard.

    •Nurudeen, Yusuf Temilola President-Elect, LASU Students’ Union.

  • Students protest hike in LASU’s fees

    Students protest hike in LASU’s fees

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) yesterday stormed the office of Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola to protest the school fees hike at the Lagos State University (LASU).

    The students were led by their Southwest Coordinator, Sunday Ashefun, who blamed the continuous unrest in the school on the hike.

    They barricaded the entrance to the governor’s office, urging Fashola to reverse the school fees increment without delay.

    Ashefun urged the Federal Government to honour its 2010 agreement with the Academic Staff Union of Colleges of Education (COASU) and Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP).

    They said students in tertiary institutions must go back to school.

    The students urged the managements of the University of Lagos (UNILAG); College of Education, Ikere-Ekiti; and Tai Solarin College of Education (TASCE) to lift the ban on unionism.

    The also called for the conversion of the Higher National Diploma (HND) certificate to Bachelor of Science degree (B.Tech) in Technology; implementation of the 26 per cent budgetary allocation proposed by the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and removal of the supervising Minister of Education.

    They vowed to resist plans by the Federal and state governments to introduce new tuition fees in tertiary institutions.

  • LASU VC optimistic about new projects

    With new facilities springing up at the Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, its Vice Chancellor, Prof John Obafunwa is optimistic they would greatly add value to teaching and learning.

    He spoke when the Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, Dr Obafemi Hamzat, and his Information counterpart, Mr Lateef Ibirogba toured the projects of the Lagos State government in the Ojo campus of the university last Wednesday.

    The projects including the Senate building, central library, LASU Radio, Faculty of Education, School of Transport, Faculty of Law and the Students Arcade are all being handled by the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC).

    Obafunwa said the facilities would contribute to practical learning in a conducive atmosphere. He added that apart from the ongoing projects, many other facilities have been rehabilitated or are under construction.

    “There is no doubt that by the time all these are completed students will be able to learn in a conducive environment. With the laboratories being constructed, we have enough lab space to train students practically,” he said.

    The VC also announced that the university’s School of Communication will be relocated from the Surulere Campus to Ojo, where it will be housed next to the LASU Radio, which will be completed in April.

    “LASU Radio will partly be used for training Mass Communication students. The adjoining space to the Radio will be used to put up a building for the Mass Communication Department which will move from Surulere soon,” he said.

    Beyond the buildings being of top quality Dr Hamzat said that the construction has provided opportunity for engineering and building students to learn about practical work in their fields. He said this sometimes may delay the completion of the project but was worth it.

    “These buildings are designed to last 200-300 years. We did piling work for the library to ensure the building lasts a long time. The piling work will give opportunity for students to see and understand how it is designed. I was in the University of Ibadan and I did not see concrete until I was in my fourth year. It is important for us to delay the work when necessary so students can learn how it is done,” he said.

    On his part, the Commissioner for Information, Mr Ibirogba said the ultimate aim of the investment in LASU is to improve the quality of education given to students so the certificate is prized worldwide.

    “It is for us to bring LASU to the level that all over the world where the certificate is presented, it will be accepted,” he said.

     

  • LASU gives deadline for fees payment

    The Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, has fixed today as the deadline for the payment of school fees by its fresh students.

    A statement by its Public Relations Officer, Kayode Sutton, said the deadline would not be extended.

    The institution warned that only students who paid the school fees would be issued matriculation numbers.

    It urged the new students to make all necessary payments on or before the deadline in readiness for their matriculation tomorrow.

    LASU said adherence to instructions would enable it to ensure a hitch-free academic calendar.

    It urged all its students to be of good behaviour and abide by the school’s rules and regulations.

  • ‘Lagos committed to infrastructure upgrade in LASU’

    ‘Lagos committed to infrastructure upgrade in LASU’

    The Lagos State Government said it is developing infrastructure of the future that would last between 200 to 300 years to meet the challenges of the next century.

    The commissioner of Works and Infrastructure, Dr. Femi Hamzat, said this accounts for the time taken to build the substructure of the current infrastructure upgrade in the state.

    He stated this over the weekend at a tour of duty that took him to the Lagos State University (LASU) where he inspected ongoing projects such as the Senate building, central library, lecture theatre, School of Management Sciences and the Law library theatre.

    The other projects inspected include the Students’ Union building, auditorium, LASU radio, Lagos Homs and the International School.

    The commissioner gave an assurance that the Senate building, which construction began in December 2011 would be handed over in June, while the construction of the Transport and Management Science buildings would be ready by August this year and 2015 respectively.

    On the financing model, Hamzat said the projects are being financed solely by the state government, but however declined to disclose the financial commitment of the government.

    He explained that government is committed to de-flooding the institution’s premises, which he stressed accounted for the massive drainage project currently under construction.