The
Academic Staff Union of Universities has said that the threat to sack
striking university lecturers issued by the Supervising Minister of
Education, Nyesom Wike, is a proof that the minister is ignorant of
labour laws.
ASUU President, Dr. Nasir Fagge, said at
a press conference in Abuja that a serious government should be ashamed
of the rot in the universities which the union had been struggling to
tackle.
His statement was titled, ‘Misrepresentations and intimidation: How not to manage the crisis in the university system’.
He said, “It is unfortunate that close
to 20 years of national life have not taught politicians and their
government the simple lesson that the job of lecturers is bound by the
university statutes, which stipulate conditions for employment,
promotions and dismissal of lecturers at all levels.
“That a minister of education would
pronounce a threat of mass sacking of academic staff is a tragedy of
huge proportion for Nigeria and Africa.
“While ASUU has been struggling for
conditions in which Nigerian students would benefit from a very much
enhanced academic environment in teaching and research facilities, the
Minister of Education is thinking of a thoughtless mass sack as a
solution to the problems arising from government’s non-implementation of
an agreement reached with ASUU as if Nigerian rulers have made no
intellectual progress since (late Gen. Sani) Abacha.”
Wike, had at a news conference in Abuja
on Thursday warned that any lecturer that failed to resume on or before
Wednesday would be sacked.
He had also told the vice-chancellors to open attendance registers for lecturers to indicate their resumption date.
He directed the vice-chancellors to
advertise vacancies (internal and external) in their institutions if the
lecturers failed to resume as directed.
But ASUU described the Federal
Government’s threat to sack lecturers as “a tragedy of huge proportion
for Nigeria and Africa” and that it would only compound the crisis.
“The salvos that have been coming out,
allegedly from the Minister of Education make one to wonder whether the
person that is charged with the responsibility of superintending over
the Nigeria’s education system has the wherewithal to handle such a
vital national assignment,” he said.
The union also accused the government of
embarking on a deliberate ploy to weaken the public universities in
favour of private universities.
It said it would return to the negotiation table if government showed commitment to solve the problems in the sector.
ASUU said government through the
Ministry of Education and the National Universities Commission had been
feeding the public with “rumours, lies and mischiefs” to mislead the
Nigerian public.
ASUU maintained that it did not make new
demands as claimed by the Federal Government, but only demanded for
proper documentation to guard against implementation failure.
This, ASUU said, was why it insisted
that the MoU be signed by a representative of government, preferably the
Attorney General of the Federation, the lecturers representative with
the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress as a witness.
“From all evidence”, Isa said, “it is
clear that ASUU has not made any new demands. First, asking the
government to implement its agreement to provide N200bn in 2013 in two
weeks is not a new demand.”
Pointing out that the President and ASUU
agreed that the 2009 Agreement would be renegotiated in 2014, and
re-asserting it because the letter from the Ministry of Education
omitted it, “is not a new demand.
“The inclusion of the non-victimisation
clause is a universal practice. And ASUU’s insistence that the
resolutions accepted by both sides be signed by both sides is not a new
demand but a requirement of all agreements”, he added.
ASUU feared that the Government’s approach to the education crises was a deliberate ploy to privatize education.
It accused the Federal Government of
pursuing privatization policies in critical sectors of the economy
contrary to the Nigerian Constitution which “states clearly that the
commanding heights of Nigeria’s economy shall be publicly owned”.
The union singled out the late President Umaru Yar’Adua for praise for desisting from privatizing education.
Isa said, “We resisted Abacha’s
dictatorship. We refused to succumb to Obasanjo/IMF attempts to weaken
public in favour of private universities.
We convinced Yar’Adua to keep
faith with the interests of Nigeria’s youth and desist from privatizing
education. We remember Obasanjo’s position that the solution to ASUU’s
resistance is to flood Nigeria with private universities.
“In spite of all these, stretching from
ASUU’s principled resistance since the military, we have noticed with
disgust how easy it is for ministers and governments to take refuge in
political blackmail. We shall never succumb to this. Our country is our
union’s constituency”, he added.
The union urged Nigerians to ask the
minister why the government did not respond to its letter before going
to the public to claim that ASUU was making new demands.
With 37,504 teaching staff in both
Federal and State universities, the union disclosed that there was the
need to recruit additional 23,000 lecturers.
It also recommended that government must
establish a policy that would improve national teacher-student ratio to
1:20 within the next two years.
ASUU lamented that majority of the
universities were grossly understaffed while staff distribution in
qualification and rank indicated that Nigeria’s university system was in
crisis of manpower.
According to the union, only 43 percent
instead of 80 percent of the academics are Ph.D holders, while only 44
percent instead of 75 percent are between senior lecturers and
professors.
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