Editorial
Still On ASUU Strike
The face-off between the Federal Government and striking public university lecturers under the auspices of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) may not be over soon, if the body language of the warring parties is anything to go by.
While ASUU is insisting on full implementation of its 2009 agreement with the government and the implementation of the 2017 Memorandum of Action (MOA), the Federal authorities, on their part, contend that government has demonstrated sufficient goodwill and commitment towards realising the pact it entered into with ASUU.
The union had on November 4, 2018, after an extraordinary National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Akure, declared a total and indefinite nationwide industrial action to press home its demand for adequate funding of public universities.
Though, the three-month strike has not been total as expected, as few local chapters of ASUU opted out of the national strike, the impact on the university system has been devastating as academic activities in over 95 per cent of the nation’s public universities have been paralysed.
Sadly, most universities should have by now resumed for a new academic session after the Yuletide, but it was not to be as ASUU remains adamant and intransigent, a posture that some stakeholders in the education sector see as “self serving”.
Traumatised students are idling away at home while parents are lamenting over the plight of their children and wards. As the wise often say, an idle mind is the devil’s workshop and temptations may not be ruled out as some students may end up in crime and criminality.
Several bodies and well-meaning Nigerians, including the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), members of the National Assembly (NASS) among others, have called on ASUU to end the strike to pave way for further discussions, but unfortunately such appeals have not yielded the expected fruitful results as the strike has continued.
Similarly, entreaties had been made to government to accede to most of ASUU’s demands, all to no avail. Infact, so far, no tangible milestone has been achieved in the deliberations between government and ASUU. The society is, indeed, paying the price.
Recently, students in various parts of the country threatened that they will boycott the forthcoming general elections in protest against the prolonged strike. From all indications, about one million university students may not vote since they registered at units close to their schools.
The Tide frowns at all these seemingly endless industrial actions in our university system. While we condemn the lackadaisical manner government officials are handling such serious national issue, we also think that ASUU should soft-pedal a little to pave way for a middle course-resolution of the issues at stake. The current impasse should not continue.
We think that government must learn to honour agreements or resolutions it freely reached with university teachers and, indeed, others but where it becomes so obvious due to other national exigencies, government should appeal to the conscience of the aggrieved parties for a compromise.
However, that is not to say that ASUU should always resort to strikes at the slightest provocation. Let national interest always prevail over sectional or partisan considerations.
The Tide strongly believes that government owes the society a responsibility to adequately fund not just only the university system but also education at all levels – primary, secondary and tertiary to accelerate national development.
Government must stop paying lip service to the wellbeing of our children as education remains the bedrock for growth. A situation where our students and graduates are degraded or denied admissions in other climes due to the poor quality of our education sector must stop forthwith.
It is sad and unfortunate that no Nigerian university is ranked amongst the 500 best universities in the world. This is worrisome and unacceptable.
And that is why ASUU and government need to agree and call off the strike immediately.
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