Monday, November 4, 2013
ASUU blames IBB for decay in education sector
The Academic Staff Union of Universities has blamed former military
dictator, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida for the current problems bedeviling
the nation’s education sector.
The union believed that the former military President presided over
what it described as the dictatorship of the International Monetary
Fund and Structural Adjustment Programme, whose policies were
used to “kill public schools” in the late 1980s.
The union, which said its four-month-old strike would continue until
government shows genuine commitment to the 2009 agreement,
also called on government to reject “the reintroduction of SAP
through the back door.”
The chairman of ASUU, Obafemi Awolowo University, Prof. Ade
Akinola, in a statement on Monday, said the government should show
patriotism and ensure that the university teachers returned to work.
He said, “Patriotism demands that the government should reject the
dictate of the international financial conglomerate (IMF) and the
reintroduction of SAP through the back door, under the
superintendence of the Minister of Finance, Dr. (Mrs.) Ngozi Okonjo-
Iweala.
“Otherwise, why the rush to imbibe this strange doctrine that basic
education is what Nigeria needs? The implication of this is that
government should minimally spend or disengage from spending on
tertiary education. Yet, we are in the age where knowledge is the
difference. Wilful collapse of public institutions and subordination of
national interest to private one must stop.
“ASUU insists that the strike continues until government shows
genuine commitment to the 2009 FGN/ASUU agreement as
reinforced by the MoU of January 24, 2012 as it will not be part of
this deliberate decimation of public university system.”
The OAU-ASUU brach chairman said government’s patriotism became
necessary “to stop this cycle of institutional collapse.”
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