
Rising from its congress at the Delta State University (DELSU), Abraka,
Benin Zone of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) on
Wednesday night vowed that the ongoing industrial action by lecturers
would not be called off despite release of N100 billion by the Federal
Government to ease the burdens in the Universities.
The union accused the Federal Government of divide and rule by trying to
buy the Committee of Pro-Chancellors and Committee of Vice Chancellors
with the recent release of another N30 billion, saying such policy would
not divide them.
Coordinator of ASUU in the zone, Sunny Ighalo, insisted that until
government adhered purely to the agreement earlier reached by both
parties, the lecturers will not return to the classroom.
“The ASUU has been on a nationwide total and indefinite strike to
express its frustration over the continuing reluctance of government to
fully implement vital aspects of the 2009 FGN/ ASUU agreement as
captured by the MoU of January 2012.
“This struggle, which has now entered its ninth week, is driven by the
unshakable resolve of our members to stem the continuing trend with
successive governments of Nigeria, to systematically destroy public
education through neglect and near total abandonment.
“The strike has indeed moved into a critical stage where government is
now applying the instrument of intimidation and blackmail and other
gimmicks to undermine the struggle,” Ighalo said.
At the end of their meeting a statement was signed by Chairman of DELSU
ASUU, Emmanuel Mordi; Chairman of UNIBEN ASUU, Anthony Moye-Emina;
Chairman of AAU Ekpoma ASUU, Fred Esumeh; Chairman of NDU ASUU, Beke
Sese; and Ighalo himself.
The lecturers accused government of being insensitive to the plight of
Nigerians by not meeting their demands as contained in the MoU.
Ighalo insisted that the union was not on strike to make fresh demands,
and neither was it ready to renegotiate the existing agreement.
Rather, “We are calling on the government to implement the 2009 ASUU/FGN
agreement it willingly signed with the union in 2009,” he added.
According to him, though N500 billion was expected from the government
based on Needs Assessment carried out and contained in the MoU of
January 2012 for revitalisation of the Universities, government claimed
it distributed N100 billion most of which were promissory notes.
He appealed to parents and students to understand
the lecturers’ position, noting that it was to help the education system in the country which had almost collapsed.
But Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, himself on Thursday pleaded
with Nigerians to try to come to terms with the predicament government
faces in all sectors of the economy and refrain from assessing the
administration of President Goodluck Jonathan as under-performing.
Maku, who spoke against the backdrop of the ASUU strike at an
interactive forum with journalists in Abuja, said huge money being spent
on the sustenance of peace, particularly in the crisis-ridden North
East states, was indirectly having its toll on the resources available
for educational development.
He described ASUU’s demands as mundane, saying, “The striking lecturers’
grievances are tied around earned allowances but they forget that
government in the past two years has never defaulted in the payment of
their statutory salaries.”
“People are quick to point accusing fingers on the Federal Government, even when things are not working at the state level.
“Take the issue of primary school education for instance, it is the
responsibility of states and local governments to provide basic
education for citizens in their states, not the responsibility of the
Federal Government, but we go out of our way to intervene in the
education sector, which accounts for why Federal Government released
funds for the building of ‘almajiri’ schools in the North.
“What ASUU is clamouring for bothers on allowances, not unpaid salaries
and government has provided N30 billion for a start, yet they are not
satisfied.
“It is not only in education that we have challenges, we have challenges
in almost all the sectors, from insecurity, aviation, agriculture,
power and a host of others.
“But we appeal to Nigerians to understand our predicament as a nation,
look at what we have spent on insecurity, which is far higher than
education; we are calling on our people to give peace a chance, as we
generate more monies through tax revenues more funds will then go into
education,” he stated.
Benue State Governor, Gabriel Suswam, also spoke on the strike, calling
on students to engage members of the ASUU in dialogue, stressing that
the lecturers have no reason being on strike.
The Governor, who noted that the Federal Government had on Tuesday
released another N30 billion for federal Universities in the country,
added that his own state university – Benue State University (BSUM) –
has already received about N950 million from the N100 billion earlier
released by government.
The Governor spoke when he hosted officials of the National Union of
Benue State Students (NUBESS) led by its President, Matthew Mamwoo, at
the Government House, Makurdi, on Thursday.
He, however, told the students that his call was not to prompt them to
embark on strike but instead to “engage ASUU in dialogue.”
Suswam lamented a situation whereby ASUU was still insisting that
government pay a total of N92 billion because “it is not practical”
after government has shown commitment by paying N30 billion