Tuesday, July 16, 2013
No Retreat, No Surrender… Strike Continues Till All Conditions Are Met – ASUU
From all indication, the members of the
academic staff union are playing “hard
ball” because for several hours Monday,
the joint education committee of the
National Assembly along with the
Minister of Education, Prof. Ruqayyatu
Rufa’i, met with the Academic Staff
Union of Universities (ASUU) over the
ongoing strike by the union but they
failed to prevail on the union to suspend
the industrial action.
ASUU vowed not to end the strike until
government meets its demands.
Before the meeting dissolved into a
closed-door session, chairman of the
committee, Senator Uche
Chukwumerije, had urged the union to reduce its demands to
only three: funding of the institutions, university autonomy
and earned academic allowances.
He deplored the federal government’s unwilling stance to
honour the 2009 agreement that it signed with the union,
describing it as a betrayal of trust. Chukwumerije also
emphasised the need to urgently end the strike in the overall
interests of students and the nation.
He said: “It is a puzzle to Nigerians that it has on three
occasions required the extreme action of withdrawal of
services by ASUU to compel the attention of the government
to the necessity of honouring the 2009 agreement.
“Why endorse an agreement in the first instance if you had no
intention of honouring it? Wherein then lies the basis for
mutual trust?”
The Senate Committee Chairman also chastised ASUU,
accusing it of brandishing what it called “self righteous
certitude.”
He added: “The public is again puzzled why a healthy
insistence on academic autonomy and institutional self
regulation should resist the searchlights of audit on any aspect
of the institution’s financial operations, whether staff or any
other aspect since the universities pride themselves as beacons
of transparency.”
Chukwumerije urged both the federal government and ASUU
to shift grounds and create room for amicable resolution of the
crisis.
However, ASUU President, Dr. Nasir Fagge, said the union
was not interested in commencing a fresh negotiation on
the agreement it had with the federal government in 2009,
alleging that the government had cultivated the tradition of
reaching agreements with ASUU only to renege on it once the
union had kept its part of the pact.
He decried allocations to education, recalling that during the
military regime of General Sani Abacha, between 1993 and
1998, the highest allocation to the education sector was 12.87
per cent as he listed various allocations to education in the
national budget since 2007.
According to him, in 2010, the allocation was 8.19 per cent;
6.41 per cent in 2011; 7.95 per cent in 2012; and 8.44 in
2013.
The ASUU president regretted further that the federal
government had over the years lacked a sense of sincerity.
“Government is not sincere. Government is not interested in
addressing the problems in the education sector. Our union is
a union of intellectuals. We cannot take guns and start
shooting people. The only option we have is to withdraw our
services,” he said.
He insisted that ASUU would not be deceived to end the
strike this time until the government begins the
implementation of the contentious agreement.
But Rufa’i urged the union to end the strike to avoid greater
damage to the troubled education sector.
The meeting eventually ended in a deadlock with ASUU
demanding 100 per cent implementation of the
2009 agreement as a condition for suspending the strike.
At the end of the meeting, Chukwumerije said:
“Having explored all avenues to address the matter, the
National Assembly is appealing to ASUU to give us two or
three days or even a week to ruminate over all the positions
reached and come back to us with a new position, particularly
the non-academic allowance that the federal government
conceded to pay five per cent in the interest of our children
who are staying idle at home and in fact roaming the streets.”
Apart from the lawmakers, education minister and lecturers,
others present at the meeting were Secretary to the
Government of the Federation (SGF), Anyim Pius Anyim and
the Executive Secretary of the National Universities
Commission (NUC), Professor Julius Okojie.
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