The Academic Staff Union of Universities has advised the Federal Government to either fund universities or shut them down.
The National President of ASUU, Prof Emmanuel Osodeke, who said this in a telephone interview with our correspondent on Sunday, insisted that government must implement the agreement it signed with the union in 2009.
Osodeke said these in response to the Minister of Labour, Employment and Productivity, Dr Chris Ngige, who during an interview with Channels Television on Thursday, stated that the Federal Government did not have the funds to meet its obligations in the agreement signed with ASUU.
Ngige said the government was considering renegotiation of the terms of the agreement with ASUU in the effort to end the ongoing strike by university lecturers.
However, the national president of ASUU, Osodeke, said anything concerning improving and investing in the universities, government would always say it had no money.
He stated, “The Nigerian type of politician does not take education seriously. Can they tell this country how much they spent on COVID-19? I can assure you the crisis in education is 10 times what COVID-19 is because what shapes a nation is education. If it collapses, you have nothing. They were building railways here and there, They were bailing out DISCOs (electricity distribution companies) which they sold to private people, but they are still buying meters for them to sell to Nigerian people. But when it has to do with education that will shape this country, they will say they don’t have money.
The children of the poor will suffer in Nigerian universities while their children will have good education outside the country. When they are through, they come back here and take the juicy jobs here, and keep lording it over the children of the poor. It’s a class issue. For us, the option is for them; they shut down all the universities and let all the children go and learn mechanics or they fund the universities.”
He also reacted to Ngige’s statement that the government was calling for renegotiation of the 2009 agreement it signed with ASUU.
Osodeke stated, “We are not signing any agreement or MoU with them. They should implement what they agreed upon 13 years ago. At that time, the exchange rate was one dollar to less than N100.00, but now, the exchange rate is one dollar to more than N500.00. Even the value of that money before we agreed in 2019 had already been eroded.
We have finished renegotiation. All the things we asked for were scientifically calculated. On what basis do they want to reduce them? ”
He said as the strike entered the third week, the government had not made any genuine effort to meet the union’s demands.
Some of the union’s demands which have yet to be met are funding for revitalisation of public universities, earned academic allowances, University Transparency Accountability Solution; promotion arrears, renegotiation of 2009 ASUU-FGN Agreement, and the inconsistencies in Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System Payment.
Osodeke stated, “Nothing concrete has been done. My members are saying we don’t want stories, promises. By now they should have told us the issue of UTAS has been approved. That shouldn’t take them more than two days
“Nothing has changed, they can do all those things within one week. If we take it that there is a crisis in education, they can do it.”
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