In a telephone interview with SUNDAY PUNCH, the President of the
union, Dr. Isa Fagge, said students were tired of the incessant
industrial actions by the university lecturers due to the Federal
Government’s failure to implement the agreement it had with ASUU since
2009.
Fagge said the union had decided to heed the advice of the
students to continue the strike until the Federal Government fully
implemented the agreement.
“Our students have come out to say they
don’t want us to call off the strike until the Federal Government
answers us, because they don’t want us to call off now and later we go
back to strike again. So, we are heeding the advice of our students,” he
said.
On the complaint by the Federal Government that it lacked
the funds to implement the agreement, Fagge said it was not all about
money, noting that government did not need funds to start implementing
some parts of the agreement.
“There are issues and agreement they can implement without money. Why don’t they begin with those ones?” he asked.
He
added that it was unfortunate that the government had pulled out of
dialogue with ASUU, stating that the union would not be intimidated.
He
said, “Now, government has pulled out of the dialogue. We thought we
were the ones going on strike, but now government has also gone on
strike.”
Last Thursday, university students under the auspices of
the National Association of Nigerian Students reportedly staged a
peaceful protest in Ado-Ekiti and flayed the Federal Government for
failing to honour the agreement it had with ASUU since 2009.
The
students, who were from public universities, threatened to disrupt
activities of private universities, adding that the government was not
bothered about their plight because children of government officials
were studying either in private universities or studying overseas.
The
university lecturers began an indefinite strike on July 1 and have been
demanding full implementation of the agreement ASUU had with the
Federal Government in 2009, which among other things include the
UNESCO-recommended 26 per cent budgetary allocation for education.
However, the government said it could not implement the agreement, and
is seeking re-negotiation.
The Federal Government, last Wednesday,
accused ASUU of being unrealistic by continuing its nationwide strike
and asked it to rethink its demands, considering other commitments
government has.
The Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, who
gave government’s position on the strike when he briefed journalists at
the end of the weekly meeting of the Federal Executive Council, said
apart from security, education was one of the sectors the government had
expended a lot of money on.
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