As the strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, lingers on, two conditions that’ll end the industrial action quickly has been identified.
Speaking on Thursday National President of ASUU, Emmanuel
Osodeke, said the Federal Government could end the ongoing strike in one day.
Explaining his point, Emmanuel Osodeke, said the Federal
Government could resolve the strike if they prioritized the demands of the
union.
Speaking with Arise News Morning Show, Osodeke, Nigerian
leaders would resolve the strike quickly if their children are schooling in the
country.
Osodeke said: “Government should prioritize education like
Nnamdi Azikiwe and Awolowo, and older leaders did in this country. When we were
in school, we were paid bursaries, but all that is gone now.
“This issue can be resolved in one day if the priority is
there. If Nigerian leaders have their children in Nigeria, they would resolve
the problem quickly.
Commenting on the state universities calling for the
resumption of academic activities, Osodeke said: “Kwara State University is not
a member of ASUU. Osun State University was suspended from ASUU for
misbehaviour. We are in court with LASU (Lagos State University) because they
sacked all our executives more than five years ago. They were not part of this
struggle.
“ASUU does not run a university. The government has the
right to say, ‘we have reopened.’ Our members have the right to say, ‘that’s
good for you. We are not teaching because we are on strike.’
“As it happened in Gombe State University, Yobe State
University, and Kaduna State University. I just cited those examples. They are
irrelevant (the call for resumption). Is Ibadan on strike? Is UNN on strike? Is
ABU on strike? Is BUK on strike? Is Maiduguri on strike? Is Lagos on strike?
Let’s talk about proper universities, not those quacks.”
When reminded by one of the anchors that he called the state
universities quacks, he affirmed “Yes!”
Reacting to the National Parent-Teacher Association of
Nigeria’s suggestion that parents should pay N10,000 to support the
universities, Osodeke said the parents should tell the government to perform
its functions rather than contemplate making such a payment.
“They should meet the President and tell him, ‘please, honour
your agreement, make education your priority in the country. Use Nigerian
people’s money, not the President’s money, to fund education as it is done in
other countries. If you do that, the country will take education as the number
one priority.”
He said the parents should also meet the National Assembly
and tell the lawmakers to improve budgets for education.
The labour leader argued that parents were already paying
the N10,000 through what the government had failed to do.
“When we were students, we took hostels subsidized. We were
paid bursaries for being students, but all those are gone. Parents have taken
care of all those responsibilities.”
According to him, all the funding sources for public
tertiary education in the country are in Nimi Brigg’s recommendation to the
government on the union’s demands.
He explained that if parents pay the N10,000, the government
will loot the fund. According to him, the fund is not the solution.
“What we are asking for this revitalization is less than
what they have just released for feeding children in school. They released N200
billion for feeding children in school. They released N400 billion for
tradermoni. Only one man took N170 billion. That is the issue.”
Osodeke also pointed out that lecturers in advanced
countries also go on strike, just like ASUU, stressing that the only difference
is that governments in developed nations respond promptly to their employees’
demands.
“When you check the number of times the lecturers in Nigeria
have gone on strike, it’s not less than the number of times the lecturers in
the UK have gone on strike. When the UK government interceeds, it will not be
more than three days.”
He added: “For us, these issues can be resolved in one day
if the priority is there… If our leaders have their children in the (Nigerian)
universities the way the leaders in the UK have their children in universities
in the UK, they will resolve the problems quickly.
“Because their children are not here, they’re nonchalant
about it.”
While dismissing the government’s threat of “no work, no
pay” for his members, he urged the government to implement its agreement with
the union.
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