Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Groups Beg ASUU To Call Off Strike
As the Academic
Staff Union of
Universities (ASUU) and the Federal Government failed to
reach an agreement, the strike embarked on by the
university lecturers continued, with no end in sight since
negotiations have been cut off, several Nigerians, corporate
and civil society groups have begun to mount pressure on
the union to reason with the government on its funding
demands so that the lingering strike can come to an end.
The Coalition of Civil Society Organisations of Nigeria
(CCSON) in its appeal urged the ASUU members not to be
insistent on the funding demands for the university system
as a way to resolve the current negotiations deadlock with
the government.
ASUU had insisted on the implementation of the 2009
Agreement and the 2012 Memorandum of Understanding
(MoU), both of which stipulate that the government would
release N1.4 trillion for the sector in the next three years,
but the FG’s offer is way off the amount both parties agreed
on four years ago, prompting ASUU to label the
government as ‘deceitful’.
In a statement issued after an emergency meeting in Abuja
at the weekend, CCSON expressed concern at the declining
rate of the education sector and called on the warring
parties to urgently work on a resolution to save the sector
from further decline.
In the statement signed by the National Coordinator, Mr.
Temitope Fadahunsi and National Secretary, Mr. Ahmed
Yahaya, CCSON disagreed with ASUU that Tertiary
Education Trust Fund (TETFund) was not doing enough for
the universities.
“The issue ASUU is fighting for boils down to proper
funding and what Nigerians need is for the tertiary
education sector to function optimally, we implore ASUU
to be logical in their argument on some issues as regards
the betterment of education in Nigeria”, it read.
“We are of the opinion that ASUU is fighting a good fight
which is for the proper funding of the education sector, but
the continued strike going into its third month is not to say
that government has not been doing anything at all in the
education sector,” the statement added.
In the same vein, the National Association of Nigerian
Students (NANS), Zone B has expressed dismay over the
non-resolution of the industrial action that led to the closure
of public universities.
But the NANS Zone B comprising federal universities in
South-east and South-south states, in a communiqué issued
at the end of its council meeting at Michael Okpara
University of Agriculture Umudike, Abia State, said both
the federal government and the university teachers should
consider the plight of students and make concessions “so
that students can resume their normal academic activities”.
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