Following the ongoing strike by
the Academic Staff Union of Universities, stakeholders believe that
there is need for the country to get its education sector right once for
the collective benefit of all. Uchechukwu Nnaike and Funmi Ogundare
report
It is more than two weeks since the
Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) embarked on strike to
protest government’s insensitivity to the education sector. The union
has met severally with the federal government but it is as if each time
both parties meet with a view to getting the university lecturers to
suspend the ongoing strike, it always ended in a deadlock.
Their meeting was to focus on reviewing
the 2017 Memorandum of Action and renegotiating the unimplemented areas.
The MoA highlights the funding and revitalisation of universities,
earned academic allowances, staff schools, pension matters, salary
shortfalls, Treasure Single Account (TSA) exemption, as well as state
universities.
At the last meeting which had in
attendance the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige; the
past President of ASUU, Dr. Isa Fagge, Permanent Secretaries of
Education and Labour, Sonny Echonu and Mrs. Ibukun Odusote respectively
and other members of the federal government and ASUU delegation, both
parties only reached an agreement to open up the issues and continue the
talks this week.
At one of the meetings, the federal government had offered to release N20 billion as part payment of its demands.
The National President of the union,
Professor Abiodun Ogunyemi, had described the proposal as a paltry sum,
incapable of solving the myriad challenges of the nation’s public
tertiary institutions, and is neither enough to settle their demands in
terms of remuneration and others.
“Universities in Nigeria have been
subjected to 20 years of continued re-colonisation under alleged
democracy, in which all that the ruling circle have been regrouping
among themselves in their various faction they called political parties.
This has further retrogressed the economy in all spheres.”
He stressed that the strike is total,
comprehensive and indefinite as members have withdrawn their services
until government fully implements all outstanding issues as contained in
the MoU of 2017, and concludes the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement.
The renegotiation might take a longer
time given the misunderstanding between the union and the Chairman of
the FG/ASUU 2009 Agreement Renegotiation Committee, Dr. Wale Babalakin.
Babalakin had explained areas where his
committee disagrees with the striking lecturers, saying that he believes
Nigerians deserve quality education, which must not be compromised as a
result of inadequate funding. This he said has been the situation in
the past 30 years.
He noted that his team and ASUU are in
agreement on the need for improved education funding, but differed on
where the funding should come from.
He explained that while ASUU wants the
government to fund education alone, his team believes funding should
come from multiple sources such as the government, private sector,
education bank, student loan scheme and scholarships, among others.
Addressing journalists in Lagos on his
team’s position with ASUU, Babalakin said: “Our attention has been drawn
to several statements made by the President of ASUU, Professor Biodun
Ogunyemi and echoed by various zonal heads and other members of the same
union. As we had stated in our previous communication on this matter,
we believe that negotiations are best done on the table rather than on
the pages of the newspapers, hence we have been very reluctant to
respond to the campaign of our co-negotiators. Our position is that
dialogue on the same table is the most effective way of resolving
issues.
“Unfortunately, we are compelled to
respond to the allegations by ASUU which have been made severally in the
print and electronic media because some Nigerians may begin to believe
the inaccurate narratives that have been consistently provided by ASUU.
“Our position as a team is that Nigerians deserve and should have
quality education. This must not be compromised as a result of
inadequate funding which has been the situation in the last 30 years.
“We also believe that no Nigerian should
be deprived of university education because of his/her financial
circumstance. This position is consistent with that of the government of
President Muhammadu Buhari.
“Going by the figures provided by ASUU,
Nigeria requires over N2 trillion per annum to fund university
education. This figure exceeds in value the total amount of money
available for all capital projects in Nigeria, including health,
infrastructure, security and others. There is no doubt that if the money
were available for university education as ASUU has insisted it is, the
government will have no difficulty in spending it on university
education.
However as it is, government cannot ignore all other areas of expenditure that require funding.
Some stakeholders, who have been monitoring the situation, are in support of the strike, saying that there is need for the country to get its education sector right once and for all.
Some stakeholders, who have been monitoring the situation, are in support of the strike, saying that there is need for the country to get its education sector right once and for all.
A Director in the Quality Assurance
Office, Lagos State Ministry of Education, Mr. Dayo Adekunle said: “The
N20 billion is a far cry from the expected amount. What was agreed
between government and ASUU a few years ago was the release of N20
billion every year. That was never done by the federal government. I
support ASUU because we need to get at least for once.”
He expressed concern about the
dilapidated and obsolete structures in public institutions, saying that
they cannot also boast of adequate teaching material.
“You won’t believe it that the journals I
used in the bibliography section of UNILAG for my project in 1987 are
still there! Can you compare the learning environment of any public
university with private universities?”
The Zonal Coordinator, North Central,
National Institute of Cultural Orientation (NICO), Mr. Ohi Ojo bemoaned
the current government/ASUU face-off, saying that it is unfortunate and
that it portrays both sides in bad light.
“It is sad that government waited until
ASUU had to go into strike before beginning negotiations with them and
offering N20 billion. How far that would go in its demand is difficult
to establish and when next the other tranches would come is another
matter! It is sad that government usually waits for strike actions
before taking demands from workers serious. It is a bad attitude as it
generally portrays as being unserious.”
He described the recourse to strike by
ASUU as un-ingenious, saying that one would expect more creative ways of
making demands from government than strike from a body that comprises
intellectuals.
“That is why the University of Ilorin
should be commended for its refusal to join their colleagues in the
calls for strike actions, and the stable academic environment in that
institution is a big plus for the stakeholders, parents, students and
lecturers. They must have found a way of having their demands met
without necessarily going on strike as the national body who to me don’t
consider the consequences of their action on students whose parents
have to devise means of keeping their wards busy during the period of
strike. It is unfair.”
He said he believes the education sector should be regarded as an essential part of the system like security that must not embark on strike.
He said he believes the education sector should be regarded as an essential part of the system like security that must not embark on strike.
“The police and army do not go on strike
but have ways of dealing with their demands and having them addressed.
We have reached that stage when we should consider that option in order
to bring sanity to the sector. Enough of needless strikes by ASUU,” Ojo
said.
A former Vice-Chancellor of Obafemi
Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Professor Michael Faborode expressed
concern about the number of national and local strikes in universities,
especially public ones, saying that they have brought about instability
to and uncountable in the system.
“No nation should have whimsically
mortgaged her future in such reality of incessant strikes. The federal
government is culpable in not preventing the most potent and protracted
disruptions. Surely government cannot and should not be happy with
‘Guinness Book of Records’ profile of strikes in Nigeria that has
affected the global image and the worth of certificates from Nigerian
institutions.”
According to him, often the mishandling
of strike threats and notices by education ministry officials accentuate
and prolong strikes, adding, “from the perspectives of the staff
unions, it would seem that only the use of force could secure the grant
of otherwise legitimate demands from governments and proprietors, and to
that extent strikes have attracted a lot of gains to the unions and the
education sector over the years.
“However, an objective assessment of the
detrimental impact of strikes over its gains shows that strikes inflict
much more lasting and permanent structural damage to the system.
Empirical evidence has shown that universities with more stable
calendar, such as private universities, given the same level playing
field, would out-perform their perpetually striking counterparts.”
Faborode stressed the need for academics
to re-examine the strike option as the instrument to settle industrial
disputes at the slightest provocation, adding that both government and
the staff unions must be alive to their responsibilities to keep
Nigeria’s higher education in a sustained mode of revitalisation so that
the country can become a place desired, a land of vibrant, goal-getting
and successful higher education system for the eventual attainment of
prosperity for all citizens.
“As it is in other more ethically and
mission-conscious climes, strikes should be the very last option/joker
that should be deployed as a last resort, hence its use should not be
unduly frequent. For example, when teachers strike in England for only
one hour, the cost to the economy is very quickly computed to let
everybody see the colossal damage of the action.
“Why can’t we see things that way in
Nigeria that is still struggling to develop, and grappling with a mirage
of negative indices of development? The argument that the Nigerian
power elite class are largely and collectively kleptomaniacs,
unpatriotic, insincere and bereft of commitment to serious national
development, but rather fixated on inexplicable personal ruinous
primitive capital accumulation at the expense of our common patrimony
and well-being, to buttress the need to ‘struggle un-relentlessly’ in a
zero-sum destructive fashion cannot stand the rigour of intellectual
ethics and morality, nor the imperative of sustainable development,
which underpins our academic credential.”
A parent, Mrs. Nnedi Oke, regretted that
the government has not eliminated the causes of strike in tertiary
institution, saying that such incessant strike widen the gap between
students of public and private universities, as all would compete in the
same labour market after graduation.
She called for compromise between both
parties so that the strike will not be allowed to linger, in the
interest of the students who are always at the receiving end.
“If government says ASUU’s demand is on
the high side, then ASUU should reconsider. Government should also be
willing to implement any agreement that both parties reach amicably to
ensure smooth running of our universities. I really wish we can find a
lasting solution to this issue.”
0 Comments