Why We Are Going On Strike-ASUU
By Nasir F. ISA
Gentlemen of the Press,
At the National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of
the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) held at the Olabisi
Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago-Iwoye, between 29th and 30th June 2013, a
number of issues were raised on developments affecting the country’s
education system and the Nigerian nation as a whole. These include the
lingering crisis at the Rivers State University of Science and
Technology (RSUST), the continued violation of the rights of the
re-engaged 49 academics at the University of Ilorin, and the non-release
of the White Paper on Special Visitation to the University of Abuja.
Others include the parlous state of the economy, and Government’s
disregard for its Agreements with our Union.
The Nigerian Educational Logjam
Gentlemen of the Press, the crisis affecting the
Nigerian education sector stems largely from the failure of the Nigerian
governments, over the years, to boldly address the suffocating
challenges, which have stymied the development of the sector. It seems
that while the Government is fully aware of the enormity of the
infrastructural, personnel and other forms of decay at all levels, it
does not have the courage to tackle these challenges for the good of the
nation. This attitude on the part of Government has given critics the
impression that perhaps Government is more comfortable with the
uneducated class than it is with the educated one.
To compound this problem, the impression is often
given that we are not in control of our educational policies as external
and other influences have tended to show a national inclination to a
weakened intellectual class which in turn prognosticates a desire for an
ideologically barren, colonially dependent and financially deprived
structure that is not primed for the growth and development of the
system. ASUU challenges the Federal and State Governments, and other
stakeholders who have responsibility for the education of the Nigerian
people, to show great courage in implementing decisions, policies and
agreements produced over time so as to put Nigerian education back on
the fast lane. This should lead to the liberation of the Nigerian
education system from the cloud of despair and despondency.
Gentlemen of the Press, you will recall that ASUU
recently issued a Press Release over the untimely death of some
Students’ Union leaders who were on their way to the University of Uyo.
We used the opportunity to call for the common struggle to enthrone
democratic governance in our tertiary institutions, with full respect
for the rights of students to unionize. While this must be invigorated,
we wish to note the unfortunate situation on our campuses today wherein
most Students’ Union leaders, especially at the level of NANS, are
possible drop-outs, government agents, Youth Corp members, and other
questionable characters being foisted on genuine undergraduates in our
universities by politicians and other officials of the State.
As a Union with a stake in the future of our youth
and our nation, ASUU shall use her networks to monitor and identify the
true status of those who currently parade themselves as student leaders
nation-wide. We are determined to indigenize student unionism on our
campuses. This is the only way the Students’ Union Movement can
genuinely engage issues of noncommercial education with access to all;
allocation of at least 26% of yearly budgets to education; declaration
of emergency on the whole education system, revitalization of University
system, etc.
The Crisis at RSUST
Gentlemen of the Press, you will recall that the
crisis at River State University of Science and Technology, Port
Harcourt, has become a recurring decimal at our interactions with the
media since August 2012 because it is an issue that is very close to our
hearts. We remain steadfast in our support and solidarity with our
members at RSUST in their principled struggle against poor governance
and maladministration being perpetrated by the Vice-Chancellor and the
Governing Council of the University.
It has become more evident that the Visitor to RSUST, Governor
Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, is brazenly adamant in his refusal to respect
the laws establishing the University. The assault and harassment of our
members in that University has continued unabated since the because of
his determination to stick with the re-appointment of Prof. B. B. Fakae
as Vice-Chancellor, after serving an undeserved first term which did not
follow due process. The most worrisome dimension is the scandalous
involvement of security agents in this show of shame.
Today, at RSUST, there is widespread abuse of
university statutes and mind-boggling illegalities; unqualified
lecturers teach postgraduate courses while examinations conducted
without respect for requisite requirements. It is disheartening to
observe that the Nigerian Universities Commission (NUC) has been playing
an active role as an accomplice in the desecration of our University
system by giving its approval to these despicable acts at RSUST. NUC’s
continued disregard for its statutory responsibility as a regulatory
agency, with the responsibility of maintaining the highest level of
ethical and academic standard in Nigerian universities, as evident in
RSUST, creates a grave cause for concern among the membership of our
Union. We call on the National Assembly, through its oversight
functions, to conduct a comprehensive investigation into the role of NUC
in the shameless acts of executive obduracy at play in RSUST.
Re-engaged University of Ilorin Lecturers
You would recall that 49 lecturers of the
University of Ilorin were unjustly sacked for participation in a
nation-wide strike action of our Union in 2001. Despite the Supreme
Court judgment, which re-validated their right to unionize and removed
the toga of criminality woven around union activities by Unilorin
authorities, their entitlements are still denied them. Three years after
the landmark judgment, the University still withholds the salary and
allowances of some of the affected staff while their entitlements for
sabbatical leave and promotions have not been addressed.
We, once again, call on authorities at Unilorin to
desist from gagging our members and pitching academics against
themselves. A university scholar cannot creatively engage knowledge in
an atmosphere of rancor and sponsored bitterness. Neither can they
auspiciously fulfill their obligations as agents of change and
transformation in their micro community and the wider context of
humanity. We shall, therefore, continue to use all legitimate means
available to us to protect and defend the interests of academics at the
University of Ilorin.
The Seemingly Intractable University of Abuja Crisis
Gentlemen of the Press, it is becoming crystal
clear that the Government is insincere in resolving the crisis at the
University of Abuja. As you are possibly aware, the Special Visitation
Panel, which looked into the monumental crisis that engulfed the
University last year, submitted its report in September 2012. However,
the Visitor to the University, President Goodluck Jonathan, has
continued to vacillate on what to do with the report of the Panel.
Meanwhile, the Uniabuja Vice Chancellor, Prof. Samuel Adelabu, continues
to operate like a lord and master whose words are laws!
ASUU-NEC calls on the Visitor to Uniabuja to
release the White Paper on Special Visitation to Uniabuja without
further delay. It is only by doing so and implementing the
recommendations of the Visitation Panel that the University can be given
a new lease of life that befits a 25-year old university.
IMF/World Bank and Nigeria’s Economic Development
Gentlemen of the Press, as you are well aware, the
Nigerian economy is fraught with contradictions and inconsistencies.
Unfortunately, it is glaringly under the jugular clutches of Western
economists, experts and interests who promote exogenous (external)
instead of endogenous (internal) model of development. This model took a
firm root when, in “the early 2005 a group of economists, mainly from
the Breton Woods Institutions introduced the concept of Inclusive Growth
(IG) to replace the erstwhile notion of Growth and Development (GD).”
What is most significant about the IG model is its “attempt to run away
from the need to accelerate economic development through deliberate
policy interventions so as to move millions of humanity out of poverty”.
Having imposed the IG on the country by agents of
the World Bank and IMR, it is little surprising that today “economic
growth” does not equate to “Nigeria’s development” and prosperity of
Nigerians. Key sectors that ought to provide the planks for development
and prosperity such as education, power/energy, agriculture and health
are in dire state. Government at all levels rather hoists frivolities
over the essentials. As recently observed by Prof. Akpan Ekpo, “The
implementation of the Transformation Agenda does not preclude the fact
that the economy today is characterized by high and rising rate of
unemployment particularly among the youths, decayed public school system
at all levels, lack of quality public health system, massive
corruption, security challenges, among others”.
ASUU-NEC rejects externally imposed models of
economic growth that discounts human elements in the equation. The
Bretton Woods experts can only further under-develop Nigeria and
pauperize her citizens. This is because IG “stresses productive
employment rather than income redistribution”; implying that the tiny
rich Nigerians will continue to get richer while the mass poor will
become poorer.
A non-insulated economy will only be a subservient
economy. The solutions to our problems as a nation must be wholly
Nigerian-based, Nigerian-driven and Nigerian-centered. The current
reliance on the veiled but obvious drivers of our “envelop economy”
being presided over and supervised by agents of the IMF/World Bank will
only leave us in a worse state than the IBB era. The current jig-saw
dilemma of economic blueprints of NEPAD, Vision 20 2020,
Transformational Agenda, etc. are bound to fail in so far as they are
not based on any indigenous economic paradigm.
2009 FGN/ASUU Agreement
You will recall that ASUU declared a total,
indefinite and comprehensive strike on 4th December 2011 in order to
prevail on government to sincerely and judiciously implement the 2009
Agreement it freely entered into with our Union. Specifically, ASUU
identified the following key areas that were yet to be implemented:
i. Funding requirements for Revitalization of the Nigerian Universities
ii. Federal Government Assistance to State Universities
iii. Establishment of NUPEMCO
iv. Progressive increase in Annual Budgetary Allocation to Education to 26% between 2009 and 2020
v. Earned Allowances
vi. Amendment of the Pension/Retirement Age of Academics on the Professorial cadre from 65 to 70 years
vii. Reinstatement of prematurely dissolved Governing Councils
viii. Transfer of Federal Government Landed Property to Universities
ix. Setting up of Research Development Council and Provision of Research Equipment to laboratories and classrooms in our universities.
ii. Federal Government Assistance to State Universities
iii. Establishment of NUPEMCO
iv. Progressive increase in Annual Budgetary Allocation to Education to 26% between 2009 and 2020
v. Earned Allowances
vi. Amendment of the Pension/Retirement Age of Academics on the Professorial cadre from 65 to 70 years
vii. Reinstatement of prematurely dissolved Governing Councils
viii. Transfer of Federal Government Landed Property to Universities
ix. Setting up of Research Development Council and Provision of Research Equipment to laboratories and classrooms in our universities.
However, the strike was suspended on 2nd February
2012. As our Union noted then, “NEC decision had been taken in the
interest of the revitalization of the Nigerian Universities. To achieve
these goals, ASUU expects the government to fulfill its obligation in
respect of funding and all other matters contained in its offers.” When
the strike was suspended, ASUU drew attention to the fact that the
unimplemented agreement was due for renegotiation in June 2012.
Following the suspension of the strike, government
responded by setting up a Committee via TETFund to assess the needs of
Nigerian Universities in terms of infrastructure and required quantum of
fund. Government also mandated the Implementation Monitoring Committee
(IMC) to document and compute the financial implication of implementing
the 2009 FGN/ASUU Agreement. At ASUU’s insistence, many of these
conditions have now been met. Yet, the Government has continued to
dilly-dally on the implementation.
Out of nine items earlier highlighted, only two of
the commitment - reinstatement of Governing Councils and the Amendment
of Retirement Age Act - were met. For the past 16 months, several steps,
including formal and informal consultations, meetings, personal
contacts, have been employed to avert resumption of the suspended
action. We seem to have now exhausted all available options. Our members
cannot understand why a Government finds it difficult to fulfill an
Agreement voluntarily entered into with the Union in 2009 as well as the
MoU that was introduced following ASUU’s protest against government’s
demonstration of bad faith in 2012.
Gentlemen of the Press, one key aspect of the
Agreement where Government has demonstrated insincerity is on the Earned
Academic Allowances (EAA). Components of these allowances include
responsibility allowances to Heads of Department, Deans of Faculties and
other functionaries of the university system.
After the MoU of 26th January 2012, Government
accepted in principle to pay EAA. As if to demonstrate its commitment,
the IMC under the chairmanship of Dr. Wale Babalakin was assigned the
responsibility of working out practical and sustainable ways to do this.
When the IMC submitted its recommendations on this aspect of the
Agreement, which has run into almost four years, however, the Government
suddenly began to give excuses. And, finally, it set aside the
recommendations of the IMC on the account of financial difficulties;
these were recommendations that came out of serious engagements with
officials from relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs). Our
Union sees this sudden reversal of gears as a betrayal of trust.
From all indications, it appears Government is yet
unprepared to address the challenges facing the Nigerian University
System with the urgency that is required. This trend is dangerous, as it
constitutes a threat to the relative peace in Nigerian Universities.
There can be no justification for Government’s position given what all
Nigerians know about the management of the nation’s resources. It is
evident that Government is highly deceptive and is not interested in
sustaining relative stability in our universities. If Government can
betray our Union on the 2009 Agreement, where is the basis of trust for
the impending review that was due for 2012?
It is in the light of the above, especially having
exhausted all other options, that ASUU-NEC at its meeting in Olabisi
Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, between 29th and 30th June 2013 resolved
to call out all its members on a nation-wide strike action beginning
from Wednesday, 3rd July, 2013. The strike action is comprehensive and
total. Our members shall withdraw their services until Government fully
implements all the outstanding aspects of the 2009 Agreement, and
commences the process of review of the same Agreement.
Concluding Remarks
Gentlemen of the Press, the time has come to rise
in defense of the true liberation of our country. We believe this
liberation must begin with education, which is a veritable weapon for
socio-economic transformation. The IMF/World Bank and their local
collaborators would make Nigerians believe that “basic” or little
education is good enough for the children of the poor. It is a ruse.
Our Union counts on the renewed support of the
media in challenging agents of underdevelopment who deny less-privileged
Nigerians quality higher education, health, employment and other
life-transforming elements of development. We equally invite labor
activists, students, traders, professional groups, civil society
organizations and other progressive segments of the public to join our
determined efforts to save Nigeria from her captors.
Thank you for your kind attention.
Nasir F. ISA
President
1st July 2013
President
1st July 2013
And so...The season one began!!
Article from:http://saharareporters.com/press-release/why-we-are-going-strike-asuu
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