We Warn Government
Not To Attempt To Break The Strike
We Call on ASUU To Name a Day for Nationwide Mass Protest
and Demonstration
Press Statement
From all
indications, negotiation between the Federal Government and the Academic Staff
Union of Universities (ASUU) has broken down. Instead of the usual plea for
patience and understanding from members of the public, what we now hear from
top government officials are threats, blackmails and street-gutter propaganda.
The
meeting, last week, between the Secretary to the Government of the Federation
(SGF) Pius Anyim and Universities’ Governing Councils and Vice Chancellors is a
clear indication that the Federal Government is seriously considering forcing
ASUU back to work. In 2009, similar efforts were made which led to the opening
of attendance registers on campuses and the threat of "No Work, No
Pay".
The ERC
warns the Federal Government not to make any attempt whatsoever to force,
hoodwink or arm-twist striking University lecturers back to work. In any case,
such attempt will be defeated by the determination of the striking University
lecturers and the solidarity of students and working class parents who are
deeply concerned about the abject condition of public education and the
unconcerned attitude of the President Jonathan's Federal Government.
Perhaps
nothing better demonstrates the contempt that government has for public
education than its offer of a measly N130 billion. If the truth must be told,
this amount being offered by the government to meet the dire infrastructural
deficit in the Nation's Universities as well settle backlog of earned allowance
is too little to make any impact. Indeed it amounts to dousing a roaring fire
with spittle. If the government could bail out failed banks with over N3
trillion since 2009 and yet could only raise a pitiful N100 billion to save our
collapsing Universities, then it is already clear what the priorities of the
government are. No doubt, the government cares for bankers and moneybags but
has little or no regard for public education.
However
the ERC also believes that ASUU's responses to Government's mounting threat and
intimidation have been weak and slow. ASUU by virtue of its on-going strike is
leading a movement - supported by many including students, parents and
concerned Nigerians - to make government to recognise its responsibility to the
funding and provision of quality, standard and accessible public education. As
a result, ASUU has the responsibility to
win this struggle not just for its members sake but also for the sake of working
class Nigerians who have no other option than public schools. People want to
see the government held to account over its wasteful spending and looting of
the treasury while public education suffers. People want to see our public
schools transformed in terms of facilities and infrastructures after this
strike. Any other outcome will be unsatisfactory to many.
Therefore
it is ever-more incumbent on ASUU to come up with a fighting strategy and
programs of action that can defeat the government and compel it to use Nigeria's immense resources to fund public
education. This is why the ERC urges ASUU to immediately name and begin to
actively mobilise for a day of nationwide mass protest and demonstration that
will see University lecturers, students and working class Nigerians march
together in defense of public education.
We believe
ASUU has the credibility and political authority to call Nigerians out to
protest to save public education. If ASUU fully mobilises its own members and
actively mobilise Nigerians to come out on a given day to protest and demand
better funding of education, the response will be massive.
However it
goes without saying that the strikes ravaging the education sector have exposed
the President Jonathan's government as an anti-education government. No matter
how much his spokespeople try to varnish the truth, nothing can hide the fact
that President Jonathan's government is an anti-poor capitalist government that
holds public education as well as the teachers and students in contempt. Otherwise
how do you explain the litany of unimplemented promises reached with various
unions in the education sector?
An example
is the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) which suspended its strike
for a month to allow government fulfill its promises. Up till now the demands of
ASUP has not been met meaning that the Nation's Polytechnic could be shut dow
all over again. Similarly, the College of Education Academic Staff Unions
(COEASU) is gearing up for a strike over same grouse of unimplemented agreement.
We call on
all the Unions in the education sector
to unite together to fight the government. What this means is that all the
Unions in the education sector need to come together and work out a joint plan
of struggle through which governments neo-liberal and anti-poor education
attacks can be resisted.
We also
call on the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) to
declare a one-day solidarity general strike and mass protest to back ASUU and
other unions fighting to save public education. However struggling for
improvement in the funding of education is not enough, also crucial is the need
to insist on the democratic running of schools by elected committees of
students, teachers and communities. Only this can ensure that funds are not
squandered but are judiciously utilised to meet the real needs of public
schools.
Hassan Taiwo Soweto
National Coordinator
07033697259
2 comments:
Na God go punish Una
Disrupting the educational calender. It's pitiable that so called "intellectuals", and asuu exco made up of professors and the likes would let greed keep students at home, over so-called earned allowance . If asuu cannot shift ground ,then they do not have the interests of the students at heart, corruption and rotteness has eaten into the heart of ASUU
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