The federal government Tuesday released the sum of N30 billion to the
Ministry of Education for onward disbursement to the universities for
the payment of earned allowances of the striking members of the Academic
Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).
Benue State Governor,
Mr. Gabriel Suswan, made this disclosure at a meeting with the National
Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), at the state Governor's Lodge
in Abuja, where he reiterated his appeal to the striking union to
return to the classrooms in the interest of the future leaders of the
country.
Suswan, who is also the chairman of the Needs Implementation
Committee, said the money for the earned allowances was released
yesterday afternoon.
The governor admitted that although
there was delay in the commencement of the implementation of the
existing agreements, the government had already addressed almost all of
the demands of ASUU except on the allowances.
He described as
'unfair' comments allegedly made by ASUU leadership that the government
was insincere and that the government disbursement of N100 billion for
infrastructure needs of the institutions was done without consultations.
"ASUU
participated in all the meetings where it was agreed to raise N100
billion, which has already been distributed to all the universities. In
fact, the president of ASUU nominated one Dr. Baffa, who is very
resourceful. He did all the work, and presented the criteria for
distribution of the money which is based on the population of each
university," he explained.
Suswan added that after the draft
distribution was drawn up, he asked the union to go through the document
for their satisfaction.
"Instead, they wrote me a letter accusing
the committee of insincerity. The councils are the ones that would
verify what we are owing, go and ask them. ASUU said no, that unless we
put N92 billion on the table," he added.
The governor
clarified that the government cannot hand over any money blindly unless
it verified the need. This, he said, was necessary so that every
university would be allocated the money it needed for the earned
allowances.
On the N100 billion for infrastructure, which had already
been disbursed to the schools, Suswan said the governing councils would
be the ones to award the contracts, and not the Needs Implementation
committee.
Suswan also alleged that the strike had assumed a
political dimension. He appealed to all well-meaning Nigerians to work
with the federal government to find a permanent solution to the
incessant strikes, which held the danger of seeing to the production of
mediocre graduates.
He also urged NANS not to embark on a
protest as being canvassed in some quarters. Instead, he appealed to the
union to urge ASUU to return to work.
"To raise N100 billion in two
weeks is not an easy task. We are making efforts to ensure that this
intervention is sustained beyond 2013," he said.
NANS
President, Mr. Yinka Gbadebo, in an earlier address, expressed the
intention of the students' body to embark on a protest either against
the government or ASUU.
He also urged the government to consider the
idea of interest-free loans for tertiary education students to ease the
financial burden on those, who cannot easily pay for their education.
But
as if goading the union to maintain its hard stance,the Forum for
Justice and Human Rights Defence (fjhd) has given ASUU a pat on the back
for its commitment in prosecuting the three-month old strike to compel
the federal government to finally address the myriad of problems
bedevilling the country's university education system.
The
group said the action of ASUU was not unjustified while questioning the
sincerity of the federal government "to meeting the said demands"
despite the reported release of N130 billion to the governing councils
of the different universities.
In a statement by its National
Coordinator, Oghenejabor Ikimi, the group lamented that hindsight has
not shown the government acting in a sincere manner that would cause it
to be trusted by the ASUU leadership.
In the opinion of
Ikimi, the leadership of ASUU should not shift ground on the strike
issue until the government demonstrated its seriousness by signing a
kind of undertaking to implement the reformatory recommendations of the
academic union after the strike would have been called off.
The
statement said: "Even if the federal government's intention in the
above regard is sincere, it is our considered opinion that before ASUU
calls off its strike action, it must ensure that the federal government
as a matter of urgency, signs a workable document with the leadership of
ASUU on how it intends to meet their demands bearing in mind that a
similar agreement signed in 2009 between the federal government and ASUU
has not been implemented by the Federal Government till date.
"The
group believes that ASUU's demands are genuine and real as (the strike)
is an attempt by ASUU to save our educational system from extinction.
For instance, in a recent world assessment of universities where the
list of the world's first 1,000 universities were published no Nigerian
university was mentioned.
The group stressed that “our universities
deserve better funding to be able to re-position and revitalise itself
as citadels of learning before they can turn out graduates the nation
can be proud of."
However, the Delta State University, Abraka
(DELSU) chapter of ASUU has expressed appreciation to Nigerians "for
the support availed ASUU so far in the struggle", saying it would not
waver but remain resolute until victory was achieved.
In a statement
signed by its chairman, Dr. Emmanuel Nwafor Mordi, the body also
condemned what it called shoddy conduct recently of the university's
Post-UTME, claiming that its organisation "fell short of minimum
standards for DELSU examinations."
Meanwhile, the National
Association of Philosophy Students (NAPS) has said the federal
government’s inability to implement the 2009 agreement was a clear
indication of its untrustworthy nature.
NAPS stated at a
press briefing in Abuja yesterday, that the issues raised by ASUU, which
had resulted in an indefinite nationwide strike were basically for the
good of all Nigerian public institutions and as such should not be hard
for the government to implement..
Its Chairman, Adeshina Lukman, said
in his address, that the union and all other student bodies in the
country were disturbed with the development and had giving the
government an ultimatum to address the situation as soon as possible,
failure of which, it would galvanise a mass protest against the
government.
“It is no longer news that Nigerian universities
are underfunded, Nigerian universities cannot be compared with any
university in the world and this explains why there is brain-drain in
the country,” the association lamented.
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