Tag: Strike

  • Answer striking poly lecturers

    Answer striking poly lecturers

    The strike embarked upon by the lecturers of polytechnics is bad for technical education in Nigeria.

    The students who are supposed to be in school are roaming streets and involving themselves in affairs which are not related to education.

    The strike started more than 10 months ago, and there is no hope that it will soon be called off.

    I want the Federal Government to find a way of stopping this strike so that these suffering students can resume their studies.

    My suggestion for the resolution of this crisis is that the government should grant the requests of these lecturers which are meant to enhance the standard of technical education in Nigeria.

    Chris Ajaegbo.

  • Union threatens strike over aviation agencies’ merger

    Union threatens strike over aviation agencies’ merger

    Amalgamated Union of Public Corporations, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Service Employees (AUPCTRE) has threatened to embark on strike if the Federal Government fails to reverse its decision to merge the aviation industry.

    AUPCTRE said the white paper that was drawn by the government on the report of the Presidential Committee on Restructuring and Rationalisation of Federal Government Parastatals, Commissions and Agencies will affect the workers of these sectors.

    They have rejected the merger of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) and Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET) into the new body of the Federal Civil Aviation Authority (FCAA) saying that the merger will reduce the efficiency of NCAA.

    National President AUPCTRE, Comrade Solomon Adelegan said this yesterday at a press conference in Abuja.

    He said that the merging of the sectors will not do the economy well.

    Adelegan also added that, they will resist the merger and will not condone with anything that affects their workers, saying that the union in this sector have promised to fight back with all that is in their disposal.

    His words, “If the Federal government refuses to reverse its decision we will end up calling for strike.

    “We believe from our end and convinced that the merging of this sector will not do the economy any good and we are ready for the Federal Government to sit with us on a round table.

    “This merger will affect our workers in the different sectors because there is no way that this will come on that our workers will not be affected, all these sectors have their administrative, accounting departments and commercial departments by the time the sectors are merged, what happens to some of them?

    “Each sector covers several other subsectors but merging them together now won’t give them enough room. We will not condone whatever will affect our workers”

  • COEASU/ASUP strike and ministerial irresponsibility

    SIR: If I were to put a hundred billion dollars in a fixed deposit account over the past months that the College of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) and the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) strike have lasted, we all can imagine how much it would have yielded. Has anyone put a value to the strike by ASUU (now resolved), COEASU and ASUP (still on going) – all totalling 12 months in two years of the academic calendar? If it is any worthwhile to monetise the lost academic value within these periods, how much have we lost?

    I remember in the early days of January 2012 when labour went on a national strike and how the federal government yelled about the countless barrels of oil lost each day; the adverse effect of the strike on foreign reserve and GDP; and other jargon incomprehensible to the common man? But in no time at all we came to a resolution. Why?

    In a nation where millions of students whose parents’ tax money adds up to the GDP and fosters infrastructural development, ought not the education of their children be seen as priority? ‘Education is the only weapon of emancipation’ has been our mantra fro decades. How true is this in the light of recent developments?

    In all of these, the response of the Federal Ministry of Education is most shameful. Of what use is a ministry that cannot minister mercy to her many subjects?

    We need more than a figure-head ministry. We need a proactive ministry that can hoist the hope of 50 million students to relevance; a ministry they can fly with.

    My complaints on ministerial decadence will hold no ground if this second complaint is not addressed. I am most importantly concerned about the Colleges of Education in Nigeria. It is clear to the blind, and audible to the deaf that they are not what they ought to be. In fact I see them as a third class higher institution in the country and nothing more. Any surprise? That’s what they have been recently designed to be.

    Take a look at the admission scheme of the various tertiary institutions in the country, then, you will understand. The less performed are today found in the Colleges of Education, as if to suggest that the teaching profession is reserved for the dreg of the education sector whereas the colleges should be filled with brilliant minds, students who outscored their university counterparts. I mean people who really want to be teachers and not teachers of performance circumstance.

    We need to raise the cut-off mark for admission into Colleges of Education higher than those of Polytechnics and Universities. We need a Ministry of Education that will go on strike on behalf of the academic industry. We need a Nigeria built on sound practicable education and not a facade of soon-to-dry-crude oil.

     

    • Kariola Mustapha

    Lagos

  • Nasarawa: Tertiary institutions union set to go on strike

    Academic and non-academic staff unions in three tertiary institutions in Nasarawa State have threatened to go on strike over the government’s failure to meet their demands.

    Members of the unions in the Nasarawa State Polytechnic, Lafia; College of Education, Akwanga, and the College of Agriculture, Lafia, are threatening to embark on strike over issues bordering on staff welfare and administration.

    The workers had embarked on a strike that lasted for six months in 2013, but was suspended for five weeks following the intervention of the institutions’ governing councils.

    An official of the unions told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on condition of anonymity at the weekend in Abuja that the workers were waiting to collect their pay slips on Monday.

    He said the unions had met and decided to embark on the strike on Tuesday if their pay slips did not reflect their promotion arrears, which was part of their demands.

    “It is obvious that the government does not care about the education sector, especially in these three institutions.

    “We were in this struggle with the state university, but the government singled it out to address its challenges and remained adamant on our plight.

    “I assure you if our expectations are not met by Monday, we are definitely going on strike,’’ he added.

     

  • LASUTH workers: No going back on indefinite strike

    *As strike enters day four

    Striking health care workers under the aegis of Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) Forum has said there is no going back on its demands until they are addressed by the state government.

    The workers union made this known Wednesday during a peaceful march in the hospital.
    Its chairman, Mr Rasheed Bamishe said the workers will remain resolute until the government implements the Consolidated Health Salary Structure (CONHESS).

    He added that the payment of step arrears to some affected workers should be made without any discrimination and delay.

    Bamishe said the hospital workers have been paying to access care in the facility, saying: “There should free health services to all workers in accordance with the civil service policy.”

    He said pool officers who hitherto receive shift allowance should continue to enjoy that benefit, as such should be restored to the status quo.

    Deputy President, National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), Mr Olufemi Tonade said there was allocation in 2012 and 2013 budgets for uniform for workers but “no uniform was made available to workers.”

    He said the hospital management should sit at round table with workers and work out plans on how to monitise the uniform so that staff can procure them on their own.

    Tonade said only doctors presently receive one month salary known as “the 13th month salary” , stressing that same should be extended to other workers in the system since they too are partners in progress.

  • Colleges of Education commence nationwide strike

     Following the breakdown of negotiation between the Federal Government and Colleges of Education,the Senior Staff Union of Colleges of Education in Nigeria (SSUCOEN) has commenced an indefinite nationwide strike.
    The Union in  a press statement made available  in Kano on Sunday by Comrade Abu Enesi Ajoge shortly after an  Emergency National Delegates  Conference stated that the show down was adopted to press home the its demands which it said the government had not expressed  commitments.

    Comrade Ajoge noted that the strike , the first to be embarked upon by the Union will be “indefinite and total”, adding that “ until the Federal Government meets its demands of approving the migration of officers on CONTEDISS 11 and below and other sundry issues.”

    Ajoge, who  also doubles as  Chairman, FCE Okene branch  declared that the action would paralyse activities of Colleges of Education system whose Academic staff had been on strike for the last 10 weeks.”

    According to Comrade Ajoge, the Federal Government  has been unfairly treating teacher education in Nigeria, which he noted has become a source of concern as it will further frustrate the already weakened teacher education in Nigeria.

    He therefore called on members to remain resolute in the face of hopelessness, stressing that “this is the time to recover the soul of the system to make it worthwhile”.

    Ajoge however called on the Federal Government to demonstrate sincere commitment on the issue, so as to amicably resolve the  lingering industrial dispute for the benefit of Nigerians.

  • Ibadan poly lecturers call off strike

    Members of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), The Polytechnic Ibadan chapter, on Monday  called off  its two months-old  strike.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the union went on strike on Dec. 30, 2013 over various demands, including under funding of the institution.

    Other demands were proper constitution of the Governing Council and payment of  the 40 per cent balance of hazard allowance which management promised to pay since 2013.

    The union also  demanded  the appointment of a substantive rector  which the state government had already done.

    The Registrar of the institution,  Mr Hezekiah Fehintola, in a statement made available to NAN on Monday  confirmed that the institution resumed after a fruitful meeting with the new Rector, Prof. Olatunde Fawole.

    Fehintola added that arrangement  had been put in place for students to resume in all campuses immediately.

    NAN reports that students were seen receiving lectures on Monday during a  visit to  the campus.

    Miss Ebulomo Ariremako  of the Department of Office Technology  said she was excited when the union called off the strike.

    “I have been praying for the resumption because I was just at home doing nothing,’’ she said.

    Miss Olayemi Adewole, a student in the Geology Department, expressed concern that the strike had  affected the academic session.

    “Although I was not happy with the strike; I was busy  sewing clothes  with my mother which reduced the  boredom,’’ she said.

    Mr Adegoke Sharafa  of the Civil Engineering Department expressed the hope that academic work in the institution would continue uninterrupted  since a new rector and registrar had  been appointed.

    “Now that a new rector and registrar had  been appointed, I expect a good academic session for our institution,’’ he said.

    The ASUP Chairman, Mr Adebayo Phillips,  also confirmed to NAN that the union had called off its strike  while lectures had commenced immediately. (NAN)

  • ‘What ASUU strike did for us’

    ‘What ASUU strike did for us’

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) protracted strike provided an opportunity for some students to explore new grounds. During the almost six-month strike, they tried their hands on vocations that would prepare them for life after school. OLUWAFEMI OGUNJOBI (400-Level Language Arts, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife) reports.

    Students never thought that the last Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike would last for almost six months. Many of them expected a short action. While some hoped to return to school sooner, the wise among them found solace in skill acquisition that would make them self-reliant after their degree programmes.

    Gabriel Ayodeji got admitted a few months before the ASUU strike. As a first year student of Social Studies, he did not have any background in engineering work. But as the strike progressed, he was employed as his father’s tool manager in the latter’s engineering venture. During the period, Gabriel went on several trips with his father and was paid for his services.

    “My dad has always taught me that there is dignity in labour. Instead of staying idle at home, I took the opportunity of the strike period to learn some skills from my dad’s engineering work. We embarked on several business trips together; and as a student studying the environment and human relations, I had smooth interactions with my dad’s clients and made money too. It might sound funny being my father’s apprentice, but, at least, it is through the vocation he fends for the family and pays my school fee,” Gabriel said.

    “I put up my ego to learn tailoring last September. People thought I wanted to abandon schooling because they wonder how a ‘big girl’ like me and also an undergraduate, would take up such a vocation. I was not ashamed to wash plates, clean floor and fetch water for my master,” Tosin Olatunbosun, 400-Level Language Arts told CAMPUSLIFE.

     

     

  • Students seek compensation over ASUU strike

    Some students, who believe that the last Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike had nothing to do with their academic pursuit, have demanded compensation from the government for subjecting them to about six-months hardship. MSONTER ANZAA (200-Level Medicine, Benue State University) reports.

    Last year, university students were away from school for six months, no thanks to the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). The university teachers downed tools to demand the implementation of an agreement it reached with the Federal Government in 2009 to improve public education.

    With the reopening of universities, students are lamenting the effect of the strike on their academic programmes. They said they suffered for a cause they did not know anything about. They want to be compensated for the lost time and the delay they suffered because of the strike.

    Reliving their experiences during the action, students said its effect on their career could not be quantified.

    Kingsley Amatanweze, 500-Level Metallurgical and Material Engineering student of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), said he lost two months out of six months of industrial training because of the strike.

    “As a final year student, I should have commenced work on my project. To carry out a befitting project work takes time. Now, the school calendar is being rushed to accommodate the lost time. There is not enough time to attend to academics and conduct research work on our projects. The rush has disorganised our plans to put in efforts to develop good project,” Kingsley said.

    Dung Damack, 100-Level Biology and Education student of the University of Jos (UNIJOS) had just paid his rent when the strike started.

    “Already, half of the rent has gone because I did not stay in the room. It is like throwing money into a well. I just got a call from a neighbour that the landlord has asked me to leave the house. But I understand the landlord wants me to pay for another year.”

    Philips Guda, a 500-Level student of Medicine at the Benue State University (BSU) and national president of the Benue Medical Students Association (BEMSA), described the strike as disaster. He said: “For us at the Benue State University Teaching Hospital, who have lost too much time as undergraduates, it was a big disaster. The strike sabotaged our efforts to cover the lost time.”

    Richard Nyikwagh, a final year student of Economics at BSU, felt bad because his plan after school was disorganised. He was preparing to graduate next month, but the strike prolonged his graduation to August.

    Ekene Ahaneku, 200-Level Optometry and Public Relations Officer of the Students’ Union Government (SUG) of the Imo State University (IMSU), Owerri, said. “I am not happy because of rent. The strike has jerked up house rent,” he said.

    Given the lamentations, some students demand compensation from the government. Since the strike was not initiated by students, Kingsley said, there should be adequate compensation for them to cover the lost time. “Of course, they should pay us compensation,” he said.

    Dung Damack also believed students should be compensated. He said: “It would be a good idea if students are compensated. I wish this was possible. But you know the way the system works. To think of compensation is almost like thinking of impossibilities.”

    However, some students believe no compensation should be paid by the government because the lecturers went on strike to fight students’ cause.

    Sesugh Ande, a Chemistry lecturer at the University of Agriculture in Makurdi, who is currently in the United Kingdom for his doctorate degree, sympathised with the students over the strike but said lecturers suffered more during the action.

    He did not believe students should be compensated. “Why?” he queried, adding: “I think everyone who suffered would have to be compensated then if students demand compensation from the government. But is the compensation being seen in terms of time or money? The only thing I may suggest as compensation is for lecturers to double their efforts to ensure that students get the best training with the little that the federal government has offered.”

    Education Rights Campaign (ERC), a non-governmental organisation, blamed the government for the students’ unpalatable strike experience, but stressed that there is no need for compensation. Its national coordinator, Hassan Soweto, said: “Students, who are demanding compensation, are doing so out of frustration. Their situation is understandable. But there are questions they need to answer. Who will grant this demand? In what form will the compensation come? I honestly do not think that any student demanding compensation is right because they are giving an impression that students are not part of the struggle to save public education.”

     

     

  • ASUP: The forgotten strike

    On January 5, 2006, while in office as President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo approved a policy which reversed the discriminatory restriction of the Higher National Diploma (HND) holders from rising above Level 14 in the civil service. Instructively, it would appear that eight years after, things still remain the way they were in 2014.

    The former Minister of Education, Mrs Chinwe Obaji, and members of the House of Representatives’Committee on Education were present at the meeting where the decision was reached.

    Prior to the policy, there has been this long-drawn battle about which is superior: university degrees or polytechnic diplomas. In the public and private sectors, both are put to the test as employers – wittingly or unwittingly – discriminate against polytechnic graduates. This was what informed the decision – a couple of years ago – of turning some prominent polytechnics in the country into universities.

    In essence, if given the choice, more than 90 per cent of polytechnic students would prefer to be in a university; they only choose polytechnics as an after-thought to escape being home doing nothing.

    This dichotomy is also played on the national scene, and even in the media. The better part of last year was dedicated to the trench warfare between the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Federal Government (FG). Interestingly, too, the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) was on strike before ASUU, but theirs was not given the requisite attention. ASUP had gone on strike on April 17, 2013, more than two months before the ASUU began its own strike on July 1, last year.

    At a point, ASUP suspended its strike – on July 17, 2013 – to prepare grounds for negotiation with the government, only for it to be resumed again. The action entered its seventh month this month.

    And what were the reasons for the strike? It was undertaken to drive home a 12-point demand; this was, however, scaled down to four critical demands after negotiations with the government. The four major demands include: constituting a needs assessment committee for polytechnic education, just like was done for the varsities; the government should inject N20.8billion – as an initial stop gap – into polytechnic education; the government should make concerted efforts at bridging the gap between university graduates and those from the polytechnics; and to address the poor state of state-owned polytechnics.

    While we were all shouting ourselves hoarse over the ASUU strike, we totally “forgot” about the polytechnics, even when ASUP suspended their action to give room for negotiation, the government barely acknowledged the olive branch extended with its nonchalant attitude reflected in its graveyard silence.

    ASUP National President, Chibuzo Asomuhga, in an interview with Vanguard said: “Their (government) thinking that it is only the children of the poor that attend the polytechnics is wrong.” He also pointed out during a press conference that “while the government intervened in other sectors that went on strike or threatened to go on strike, it had ignored the nation’s call for an end to the ongoing strike.” This is the dilemma that polytechnics face in the country.

    Beyond this however, it is quite clear that our polytechnics, just like the universities as well as other levels of education are in crisis. ASUU, which ended a six-month-old strike last December, fought the government on all fronts to meet its demands. It took a lot of pressuring from the public also to get the government to agree to give the universities some money. It is for this reason that calls from certain quarters have hammered on the need to bring the action forcefully to the public domain again.

    After the suspension of its first strike last year, the government agreed to inject N20.8billion to improve the state of polytechnics only to renege, months after the agreement. Yet, we are striving to be counted among developed economies by 2020.

    To put a finger in the dilemma polytechnics and colleges of education face is to understand the psyche of those in government, and Nigerians generally. For instance, in a 2012 interview with Vanguard, Prof Onu Godwin, the Rector, Federal Polytechnic, Oko in Anambra State, said experience in the sector had taught him that more youths prefer gaining admission into universities than polytechnics or colleges of education.

    “Only very few choose polytechnics as their first choice because of some particular courses and this can be attributed to societal values on varsity/polytechnic education. I’m not saying that the university is better than polytechnics or colleges of education, but I think if polytechnics are converted to polytechnic universities, it would solve most of these problems,” he said.

    Provost, Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED), Epe, Lagos State, Prof. Olu Akeusola, also echoed this line recently when he said, “Nigerians will put education institutes in crisis if the discrimination against polytechnics and colleges of education continues.

    “We know how to copy curriculum without implementing same. The theory and concept of the 6-3-3-4 system of education is that after a child has gone through compulsory six years of primary education and three years of junior secondary school, those who are educationally inclined would proceed to senior secondary while those who are not would opt for technical schools. From there, the technical students would proceed to polytechnics while those that went to senior secondary schools would go to universities to further their education.”

    According to Akeusola, the “Post-Unified Matriculation Examination (Post-UME) into institutions of higher learning has compounded the problems because very few candidates would want to put a polytechnic or college of education as their first choice, and the universities don’t have the capacity to admit them all.”

    So, how do we begin to resolve these anomalies? I agree with The Nation editorial of July 16 that we need to revisit “why lecturers in polytechnics and colleges of education cannot go beyond senior lecturers while only in the universities can senior lecturers move to Readers/Associate Professors and finally to Professors. On this important issue, some questions need to be raised and answered. Do the differences in qualities and standards, the mode of appointments and promotion suggest the difference in the qualities of academic staff in the universities and polytechnics and the award of university degrees and polytechnic diplomas?”

    We also need to erase the stereotype and assumption that polytechnics only cater for mechanics and the hospitality industry. In reality, media, arts, design, business, fine arts, film, engineering, and journalism are all available at polytechnics.

    Many parents, teachers, career advisors, and even students do not really understand what polytechnics and independent training do and what they offer. It is almost considered general knowledge that the university is on “a higher level” than polytechnics. But universities are not as “appropriate” for creative fields as society has led everyone to believe. Universities focus primarily upon research; but creative subjects are fundamentally practical. For instance, if you want to learn how to watch a movie go to university, but if you want to make a movie, polytechnics are better suited to your needs.

    To help bridge this stereotype, the government should not be seen to be partial in the drafting and implementation of educational policies. The way things stand, it appears most polytechnics would prefer the transformation of all polytechnics in Nigeria into universities and university campuses. This development, according to this line of reasoning, is considered necessary to correct many of the anomalies that have been bedeviling the successful implementation of Technical Education.

    The reasoning also is that by the time we cease to have polytechnics in Nigeria, most of the problems of non-parity between polytechnic and university lecturers and that between polytechnic students and their university counterparts in terms of difference in rank, certification, status, designation and recognition would be over. Would it really?