From Left: Former Minister Of Education, Prof. Ruqayyatu Rufa’i; Executive Secretary, National Universities Commission (Nuc), Prof. Julius Okojie; Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Sen. Anyim Pius Anyim and Minister of Labour, Chukwuemeka Nwogu, at an ASUU negotiation meeting in Abuja
The president of the lecturers’
union said appeals should rather go to the government.
Mr. Nasir Fagge, National President,
Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, has urged Nigerians to prevail on
the Federal Government to honour the agreement it signed with the union, to
bring the union’s four-month-old strike to an end.
Mr. Fagge told the News Agency of
Nigeria, that Nigerians should stop appealing to the union to call off its
strike.
Mr. Nasir stressed that rather than prevailing on ASUU to call off the strike; Nigerians should look at its demands and see their relevance to national development.
“Why is it that when issues like
this come up, Nigerians will start begging ASUU to call off strike in the
interest of the children and the country in general, rather than prevailing on
government’.
“I want to state here that we have a
lot of respect and appreciate the concern of all Nigerians who have prevailed
on ASUU to reconsider its stand and call off the strike.
“But sincerely, I think if people
really care about this country and want to move it forward, they should refocus
their thinking to government and prevail on them to implement the agreement and
then we can start from there.
“The National Assembly had in the
time past appealed to us to bend over and we did in the interest of the country–
while negotiations lasted– but look at what is happening now”, he said.
The ASUU president noted that when
the union embarked on strike in 2011 over the same demands, the same appeal
came from concerned Nigerians, with the assurance that the matter would be
looked into urgently and its demands met.
He said that because of the need to
respect the views of these Nigerians and to keep the system going, the union
called off the strike and that, unfortunately, nothing was done about it.
“We shall no longer be coerced into
calling off the strike and returning to classes because the last time we had
such a strike was in 2011– when I was the Vice-President– and two years after,
we have embarked on another strike over the same issue.
“I think as a nation, there is need
for us to try and do the right thing by way of extracting commitment from our
leaders because we cannot continue this way”.
“Our system is getting bad every day
to the extent that when we go out with our certificates, it no longer commands
the respect it ought to, and that is why we must do all we could to re-engineer
the system”.
“You know that if products from our
universities continue to study with little or non-existent infrastructure in
place, as it is obtained today, they will fail to deliver and the entire
responsibility falls back on our shoulders”, Mr Fagge said.
According to him, ASUU is committed
to delivering on its mandate in order to produce students who are
well-equipped.
He noted that it was on this premise
that Nigerians must prevail on government to do the right thing once and for
all.
“Everyone knows that our
universities cannot compete, even with universities within Africa, let alone
those in the larger world”.
“Today, we witness brain drain from
the system on the part of lecturers, thereby exporting values to other
countries’ economy”.
“We should ask ourselves why
Nigerians before now did so well abroad in different fields of endeavour and
these are products from the same system that currently produces graduates who
are largely seen as unemployable”.
“We must show commitment and be
proactive in addressing the rot in our university system, so that at the end of
the day, our products will be able to compete favorably with their counterparts
in other climes”, he said.
The ASUU boss then appealed to the
Federal Government to implement the agreement in order for the country to move
forward.
The union embarked on what it
described as “total, comprehensive and indefinite strike” on June 30, shutting
down all public universities across the country.
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