Members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, (ASUU), Nnamdi
Azikiwe University, Awka chapter, have embarked on a protest to
sensitise the public to the union’s resolve to continue with the ongoing
strike.
Addressing the public at Awka on Monday, the chairman of the union,
Prof. Ike Odimegwu, noted that there could be dire consequences if the
Federal Government failed to meet its obligation.
He said that the argument by government that there was no money was
untenable because the government budgeted and spent more on issues that
were not as important as education.
According to him, “poorer countries like Togo, Niger, Somalia,
Liberia are budgeting much more than Nigeria for the education of their
citizens.
“Last week, Gen. Abdulsalam Abubakar submitted the proposed budget for the Nigerian centenary village in Abuja, N3.2 trillion.
“So, we have up to N3.2 trillion to plan a centenary village, but we do not have N400 billion to give to all our children.”
He however said that the union was disposed to dialogue on how to
move the nation’s education forward, which according to him, should not
include sacrificing the very substance of the agreement made with the
federal government in 2009 and 2012.
“If the strike fails the average student in a federal university will
have to pay not less than N200, 000 as school fees and this is not
ordinary speculation.
“If this strike fails, over 80 per cent of Nigerian parents will be
unable to fund the education of their children in Nigerian universities.
“Our universities will continue to turn out unemployable graduates
and our students, our graduates, will find it increasingly difficult to
get admission outside this country.
While answering questions from newsmen, he denied insinuations that
the decision of the union to embark on the strike was politically
motivated because the 2009 agreement and 2012 memorandum of
understanding it signed with the federal government were not politically
motivated.
“It was not politics when the government drew up the road map to fund
the universities education with N100 billion in 2012, N400 billion in
2013, N400 billion in 2014 and N400 billion in 2015.”
According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) the protesting
lecturers carried placards, some of which read: “Save education, join
ASUU”, “Nigeria needs quality universities”, “ASUU strike, no going
back”, “Kill education kill development” and “FG: Agreement is
agreement.”
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