Since July 2, 2013, lecturers in all but one public university in the
country have been on strike. This strike has been necessitated, nurtured
and sustained by the Federal Government's failure to implement fully
all components of the ASUU/Federal Government agreement of 2009. Ever
since the strike commenced, there have been series of meetings held
between ASUU and the Federal Government that have yielded no tangible
results. The result is that the strike has been allowed to escalate
resulting in loss of several weeks that would have been used for serious
and rigorous academic studies while thousands of students have been
idling away at home. Some have already taken to various nefarious
engagements.
As a result of the strike, the Federal Government has taken some
measures to assuage the union to call off the strike which has not been
convincing to ASUU. The measures so far taken by government need to be
critically examined. The N100bn released by government for
infrastructural development in all public universities is grossly
inadequate to meet the appalling and compelling infrastructural needs of
these institutions that have deliberately been starved of necessary
funds over the years. Again, the inflation in the country will surely
make a mess of whatever sum each university will receive from this
government 'largesse'. In any case, it has been authoritatively said
that no university has received a dime of the sum accruable to them from
the money so far after over five weeks ago. And so the unpleasant drama
continues.
Now let us also discuss the N30bn released for the payment of earned
allowances to lecturers. The Finance Minister, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala,
affirmed that it was all that the Federal Government could muster and
that ASUU should either take it or leave it. Very interesting indeed!
Government's offer is quite commendable but did ASUU unilaterally
concoct the figure of N92bn and foist it on the government to pay its
members? The answer is an emphatic no. ASUU reached and signed an
agreement with the Federal Government in 2009 and payment of earned
allowances was a major part of that agreement. Government in its wisdom
refused to implement that agreement. In 2012, ASUU signed a Memorandum
of Understanding with the Federal Government as a road map to
implementing the 2009 Agreement. Despite all these patriotic and
laudable efforts by ASUU, government treated the issue of implementation
of the agreement with monumental disdain and orchestrated levity. The
arrears that accrued from the non-payment of the earned allowances since
2009 are what account for the N92bn. In any case, ASUU has since
explained that the afore-mentioned sum is for the payment of the earned
allowances to all university workers and not just the lecturers alone.
The offer of N30bn by government is as unilateral as it is despotic in
outlook. In the course of this strike, government's negotiating team had
offered to pay 10 per cent for the earned allowances out of the 15 per
cent already agreed by the Implementation Monitoring Committee composed
of both government and ASUU representatives while ASUU insisted on the
15 per cent agreed with the government ab initio. The offer of N30bn,
which is less than five per cent of the agreed sum, smacks of
insincerity. The bogus claim that the sum is to help the various
University Governing Councils pay the earned allowances is both
hypocritical and deceitful. Where and how on earth can these councils
raise the sum of N62bn differentials in order to pay the earned
allowances in the various universities? This is an indirect way of
telling the lecturers to stay at home in perpetuity. Just recently, the
Federal Government added another N10bn to the earned allowances fund
bringing the total to N40bn. ASUU has however insisted that the sum does
not address the issue of the payment of the earned allowances as agreed
by both parties.
Those who do not understand ASUU's stance on this strike have called the
union a selfish organisation. We do not intend to join issues with such
people since ignorance according to Plato the great philosopher is a
vice. But even if that is the case, do such people also forget that ASUU
is a trade union which has the primary mandate to fight for the welfare
of its members? If fighting for the welfare of its members amounts to
the union being selfish, so be it. Again, those who accuse ASUU of
selfishness should ask the political class how much they are paid. While
a university professor with all his unassailable contributions to
nation building receives a paltry N6m per annum as his entire emolument,
a minister gets a whopping sum of N32m per annum. The National Assembly
members, on their own, take home outrageous sums as wages per annum and
the nation continues to wobble under such a vast and tremendous
illegality.
Dragging the current strike to a religious angle as some government
officials have tried to do is most unfortunate and smacks of critical
irrationality. Yes, that the current President of ASUU, Nasir Fagge Isa,
is a Muslim. But what has he done to warrant being called a religious
bigot or seeing the current strike as having a religious coloration?
This is only a dirty ploy by government and its agents to discredit the
union which will surely fail. ASUU in the past has also been on strike
during the tenure of Christian presidents. It is pertinent to condemn in
its entirety the statement credited to the Minister of Information
Labaran Maku, that the country will collapse if government were to meet
ASUU's demands. May we ask Maku some salient questions. Did the nation
collapse when the nation's billions of dollars were squandered on
President Olusegun Obasanjo's ill-fated and disastrous power projects
which brought us more darkness than light? Did the country collapse when
this present administration pumped in over N3tn to stabilise some
ailing banks as a result of the financial recklessness of some prominent
and highly connected citizens of this country who borrowed monies
excessively from those banks and refused to pay back? Again, we may wish
to ask whether the nation crumbled when this present government pumped
in over N500bn to revamp the aviation sector? What about the billions of
naira this government doled out to Nollywood as if government has
become Father Christmas?
The pretentious and deceitful intervention of Governor Gabriel Suswam
and the so-called NEEDS Assessment and Implementation Committee is
disappointing and unfortunate. Again the governor's assertion that the
strike has become political is false, dishonest and calculated to
deceive the general public and also divide the union. It is not true and
can never be. Suswam is just being economical with the truth. The
current strike and even previous ones never had any political undertone.
If the President was looking for a governor to be appointed to such a
very sensitive position, certainly Suswam is not among the best
performing governors in the country to warrant his being given such an
appointment.
Finally, we appeal to the Federal Government to toe the part of honour
by implementing fully its 2009 agreement with ASUU and save the nation's
public universities from going into extinction. Appealing to the
lecturers to call off the strike in the interest of the students as they
have regularly done since the strike began is hugely hypocritical as
the nation's universities need highly motivated intellectuals in order
to become true centers of academic excellence. Instead, the government
should save these helpless and deeply traumatised students the
misfortune of having a truncated future by ensuring industrial peace on
our universities. To do otherwise will amount to pursuing shadow and not
the real substance. It must be stressed that those in government who
state that Nigerian graduates are unemployable without making critical
efforts to fund our universities adequately so as to produce employable
graduates are simply unpatriotic and should bury their heads in shame.
•Okaneme wrote in from the University of Abuja
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