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Sunday, 28 July 2013
Strike Killing Our Dreams — Varsity Students
The indefinite strike by the Academic Staff Union of
Universities, which started on July 1, 2013, has come
with both pains and gains and mixed reactions...
, with students eager to return to academic work,
writes MOTUNRAYO JOEL
With the Academic Staff Union of Universities
remaining adamant in pushing through their
demands by going on strike, academic activities have
been paralyzed throughout the nation’s universities
leading once again to the loss of appreciable
academic time by the students.
This strike, which is on in protest of the non-
implementation of the 2009 agreement with the
Federal Government, is delicately poised with both
parties not knowing yet what it will take to win.
While some have described the action as just another
strike that may produce no purposeful ending, the
union leadership believes that it will bring a
revolution to the country’s education system.
ASUU President, Dr. Nasir Isa Fagge argued that the
union had embarked on the strike to compel the
Federal Government to address some other
important issues endangering the quality of
education in the country.
He said, “We are embarking on indefinite strike
because the Federal Government reneged in the
Memorandum of Understanding signed with ASUU in
2009 to pay lecturers their allowance.”
Throwing more light on the Academic Earned
Allowance, ASUU chairman University of Lagos
chapter, Dr. Karo Ogbinaka, said it included
allowances paid as part of excess work load,
responsibility allowance and allowance for
supervision of Post Graduate Programmes for
lecturers, head of department, deans and exam
officers, among others. He added that the highest
allowance is not more than N12, 500 per month,
wondering why it has remained difficult for
government to live up to its promises.
But the lingering strike has infuriated some of the
students who seemed to have lost their patience with
their lecturers and the Federal Government. Some of
them told SUNDAY PUNCH that the feuding parties
have no regard for their future.
Sikiru Akinola, a Political Science student at the
Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, would have
graduated in December but his hopes of stepping
into the next stage of his life are thinning daily as the
strike continues. He expresses his frustration at
being idle as a result of the inability of both parties to
resolve the issue, pointing out that irregular school
calendar in public institutions places their
counterparts in private institutions over them when
looking for employment.
He said, “I had my eyes set on December after four
years at the university but with the strike, the
calendar will definitely be affected and that is one of
the things making graduates unemployable.
“Imagine a private university student graduating at
20 and 21 while we graduate at 27. I’ve been in
school since the last seven years (NCE and Degree).
It would be unfair if my time in the university has to
be extended because of a fault I did not have a hand
in. One of the reasons why public university
graduates are getting it difficult to be employed is
because they usually graduate at the average age of
27 while those in private school graduate at 20 and
21.”
He added that lecturers had taken the strike too far
this time. “Though, we are in support of our lecturers,
it is the belief of majority of our students that the
union is being insincere with their latest showdown
with government. Each time there is an ASUU strike,
the students are always at the receiving end. Rather
than embark on a strike which cannot solve their
problems, they should use other means to press for
their demands. Perhaps if there is a law that forces
all political office holders to enrol their children in
Nigerian universities, the schools would be better
than what it is today. Dialogue and not strike, can
achieve a lasting solution.”
Akinola’s position on the strike is supported by
Toyosi Oguntuase, who is studying Law at the
University of Ibadan. Oguntuase said the strike had
created a gap between the students and academic
work.
She said, “You cannot stay connected fully to your
studies when you are at home and once the strike
ends, examinations will start in order to make up
with the time lost. The lecturers will not have the
chance to complete teaching the content of our
syllabuses. This utterly destroys our school calendar
and curriculum. It also destroys the standard of our
education and draws the students back.”
The law student also wondered if the parties involved
had children in the affected institutions.
“I feel that this strike is really unfair to students
considering the fact that some of the people involved
in the strike don’t have their children in public
universities. Also, it shouldn’t have come when
students are preparing for their examinations. The
union should use on other methods to make their
demands instead of frustrating the students in their
academic works.”
A final year student of Metallurgical and Materials
Engineering at the Federal University of Technology,
Akure, Onigbajumo Adetunji-Bouquiey, said Nigerian
leaders have failed to pay back the nation for the free
education and scholarships thy enjoyed in the past.
He said, “The generation is unlucky because they are
not enjoying what our leaders enjoyed when they
were going to school. They had free education and
scholarships to study abroad even when their
parents could not afford the quality of education they
had. Our own generation has been cheated because
the same leaders who had sound education in their
own time now consider quality education
unaffordable for the poor and less-privileged. Some
of these leaders were products of the same
universities but they no longer take pride in the
same system that made them.”
However, Ekong Utibe, who is a final year student of
Mathematics and Statistics at the Federal University
of Technology, Minna, urged the Federal Government
to look into the demands of the academic staff.
“The Federal Government should look into the
union’s proposal as quickly as possible and agree to
whatever issues they have brought up. The final year
students are affected because they are doing nothing
when they should be preparing for the final
examinations.”
But while the students are counting their losses,
lecturers are waiting to reap if the Federal
Government accedes to their demands. In the
meantime, some of them are using the opportunity
to focus on private projects.
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