Opinion
Is Strike Still A Potent Labour Instrument?
Two days ago, Nigerians woke up to the news of the suspension of an over three-month-old strike embarked upon by the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), the Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU) and the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT).
The trio, under the aegis of Joint Action Committee (JAC), had resorted to strike action, as a measure to register their displeasure, as well as draw the attention of the Federal Government to a perceived disparity in the sharing formula of N23 billion released by the Federal Government to 24 federal universities in the country. This figure represents the amount owed them as Earned Academic Allowance (EAA) for 2009 and 2010.
Although the chairman of the Joint Action Committee, who doubles as the National President of SSANU, Comrade Samson Chijioke Ugwoke, had alleged that the sharing formula, which apportioned 89 per cent of the total amount to the academic staff union, leaving the three non-academic unions with just 11 per cent “is laced with a motive of causing disaffection among members of the university community”.
The Minister of Education, Malam Adamu, Adamu, to explain the criteria used in sharing the said amount as demanded by the body, may have given the strike action the inevitable posture it eventually assumed.
However, many Nigerians are concerned about the tolls the strike has taken on the academic environment. According to the National President of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Comrade Aruna Kadiri, the strike has truncated academic activities in the universities.
Aruna listed some of the harms the strike had caused to include the inability of students that have been mobilized for the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC in some universities to get their testimonials to report to camp and the inability of students to access healthcare services in various campuses.
NANS also claimed that the security of students and their property was no longer guaranteed as a result of non presence of security personnel in the security division of the campuses while accessing social amenities became obviously impossible.
Inasmuch as these university bodies reserve the right to air their grievances in any form they so wish, the consideration of strike action by members of the academic community as an only veritable tool in settling scores with the government, has rendered it endemic as no academic calendar is successfully completed without an eruption of strike action in one university or the other. This, no doubt, amounts to time loss.
Even when some universities tend to condense contents that should have been taught for the period of the strike to about a fifth of the expected period and rush students to examinations thereafter, it literally amounts to a recipe for half-baked products, as the former Executive Secretary of the National University Commission (NUC), Prof. Peter Okebukola, succinctly put it.
According to Prof. Okebukola, globally, there is the usual sneer whenever Nigerian universities are mentioned as the nation’s Ivory Tower is quickly linked with unstable academic calendar due to frequent strikes. This, he concludes, robs graduates of our universities of international esteem even when their worth has not been proven through employment.
I am no less in agreement with the professor’s view in this regard, given the fact that top-rated universities that are desirous of staff and students exchange will always elect to partner with universities with more stable academic calendar.
Today, there seems to be growing interest and desire by Nigerian students to study abroad, with specific preference for Ghana and other African countries. This, of course, cannot be said to have been made possible as a result of superiority of academic programmes by such preferred countries. No! It is rather on grounds of relative stability in their academic calendar which has remained a far-cry in Nigeria due to incessant strike action by the teachers. Maybe, the Federal Ministry of Finance may need to quantity in monetary terms, how much eludes the Nigerian economy as a result of students emigration activities.
Like Professor Biko Agozino, a professor of Sociology said in one of his publications, I think the time has come for us to review our approach to strike action. A review has become imperative as the strike measure has obviously outlived its usefulness.
Even if anybody could argue that no strike action had lived without any dividend in terms of improved work status, the truth is that the negativities far outweigh its positivity. Hence, there is every need to review action and employ a more intellectual and moral mode of agitation.
Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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