Sunday, 3 November 2013

ERC HOLDS PRESS CONFERENCE TO CALL ON GOVERNMENT TO MEET ASUU AND ASUP DEMANDS




Report by Kayode Salako and Lamide Adabale 
 

As the indefinite strikes of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) roar on, the Education Rights Campaign (ERC) held a media conference on Wednesday 30 October 2013 to drum support for the on-going struggle to save public education and to demand the meeting of the striking union’s demands. This is part of the program of the ERC to intensify intervention in the strikes. Last week, ERC members in Lagos held a lobby action which consisted of a solidarity march on the offices of the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) to urge them to name a date for solidarity strikes in support of the struggles of education workers. 
H.T Soweto, ERC National Coordinator
As the ERC pointed out at the lobby action, a one-day strike from any of these unions and preferably from the entire labour movement led by the two labour centres of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) can prove decisive in forcing the government to begin to soften its hard-line stance and seek out ways to honour the agreements it reached with ASUU and ASUP.

The press conference which held at the International Press Centre (IPC) located in Ogba Lagos State started around 10:30am with an introductory speech from Comrade Lateef Adams (ERC National Deputy Coordinator and a student of the University of Lagos). About twenty three press men and women (including Radio and Television correspondents) were present at this press briefing. Members of the ERC and other student activists were also present.
 
Cross section of journalists and activists
Afterwards, comrade H. T Soweto (ERC National Coordinator) read out the text of the address (find posted below this report). The press text exposed the anti-poor orientation and profit-first mentality of the capitalist ruling elites in Nigeria – a characteristic which has caused the closure of public schools for over 145 days in the education sector. The ERC emphasized in the text that Nigeria is stupendously rich to meet ASUU and ASUP’s demands by committing appropriate funds to the education sector; instead Nigeria’s resources are daily expended on corruption and lavish life-styles of political office holders. It is based on this that the ERC called on parents, students and labour unions to support the strike actions of ASUU and ASUP and organize mass actions to force government to meet the demands of the striking lecturers.    

After the presentation, there were questions and reactions from members of the press. Many of the questions were quite interesting as they revealed the legitimate concerns of ordinary Nigerians. For instance someone asked ERC “to strike a balance”; another wanted to know “if the ERC is for or against the strike?” In reacting to these, Comrade Lateef Adams responded that “we in the ERC support the strike not because we love staying at home. We want the demands of ASUU and ASUP to be met for the sake good and quality education in Nigeria. It will not be good for students to resume at school after wasting several months at home only to discover that the same old conditions persist”. Comrade Wole Engels (ERC National Mobilization officer and a student of the Obafemi Awolowo University) while reacting to some of the questions said that “the interest of Nigerian students is our priority … we in the ERC believes that the interest of all Nigerian students is free, quality education. ASUU and ASUP are making such demands which if implemented will reflect significantly in the quality of education in the country.” 

Lateef Adams leading solidarity songs
Some of the media correspondents were interested to know ERC’s reaction to the anti-ASUU protests and propaganda being orchestrated by the national leadership of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) led by Yinka Gbadebo. In reacting to this, comrade Wole Engels said that “we know that the student movement has some traditions. And part of it is real involvement of students in all decisions of NANS, but Yinka Gbadebo has never done that. He has never called a congress of students since this strike started. So he is definitely not articulating the position of Nigerian students on this strike; all he is voicing is his own opinion, not those of Nigerian students.”  

Michael Ogundele National Secretary ERC
Comrade Ogundele Michael (ERC National Secretary and a student of the University of Ibadan) in his own comment said that in order to create an avenue for ordinary students to have a say, the ERC is organizing a town hall meeting coming up on 13th of November 2013 to provide an avenue for Nigerian students, education workers, parents, the labour movement, civil society, social and community groups to jointly debate and come to an agreement on actions to take to end the crisis going on in the education sector. According to him, if Yinka Gbadebo and his executives are confident of their pro-government stance, they should also come to the townhall to articulate their positions.

Tope Adesipo, the Students’ Union President of the Federal University of Agriculture Abeokuta (FUNAAB), who was also present at the press conference, in his solidarity message, blamed the dilapidating state of the educational sector on the Federal Government. He also condemned the statement made by the Federal government that institutions should seek for internally generated revenue, which by implication means increment in fees and heightened burden on the already poverty-stricken parents. This is already manifesting in FUNAAB with the recent hike of acceptance fee from 25,000 to 45,000.

Tope Adesipo, President, Students Union FUNAAB
He also condemned the pro-government stance of the NANS president. He made a lot of revelations which drew the interest of the media. One of his revelations was about the anti-ASUU press conference the NANS president recently organized in Lagos. According to Tope, the event was originally meant to be a meeting called ostensibly to afford the NANS national leadership the opportunity to know the opinion of the South west student leadership. They were however surprised when the supposed meeting did not hold as scheduled and the student leaders many of whom had to sleep over at the hotel venue till the next day were surprised in the morning seeing TV crews and press men all over the place and Yinka Gbadebo addressing them and thereby creating the impression that the anti-ASUU propaganda he was spewing out were products of a meeting with the Southwest student leadership. This shows the undemocratic method of the NANS leadership and why a student congress is urgently needed. 

H.T Soweto, in his sum up, said the Federal government strategy of arranging paid anti-ASUU protests will collapse like a pack of cards. He made references to such instances in Nigeria’s history when the ruling elite paid for rallies to create the impression their anti-masses policies were popular. One of such was the Youth Earnestly Ask for Abacha (YEAA) organized by the late military dictator Sanni Abacha. All these subterfuges notwithstanding, the genuine movement of the working masses eventually prevailed leading to the collapse of military dictatorship in Nigeria. The will of the ordinary masses of poor Nigerians will also prevail in this struggle to save public education. He maintained that the Nigerian government is only taking advantage of the poverty and destitution of some people by hiring poor Nigerians to protest against ASUU. He also publicly invited Yinka Gbadebo to come to the town hall meeting and tell the real Nigerian students why he is against the strike. 

Oluwole Engels, National Mobilisation Officer fielding questions from journalists
Soweto further responded to a question that says “If FG implements the ASUU and ASUP demands, does ERC think that this will automatically solve the educational crisis” In his response, “we cannot say it is automatic but we believe that the 2009 FG-ASUU agreement contains basic ingredients that if implemented can begin to revitalize decayed infrastructures of public universities. However as the ERC has repeatedly asserted, only the democratic control and management of schools by elected representatives of the student, parents and school management in decision making organs can begin to ensure that whatever increase in funding this strike is able to win translates into real improvement in the conditions of the education sector”.

He further blamed the backwardness of the country on the anti-poor policies of the capitalist ruling elite and that only their overthrow and replacement by a democratic workers government armed with socialist programs can save Nigeria. The conference ended enthusiastically with singing of various solidarity songs.                        

Monday, 28 October 2013

ERC CONDEMNS CLAMPDOWN ON ASUU PROTESTS BY POLICE



No to Attack on Democratic Right to Protest against Bad Policies
We Urge ASUU to Take the Struggle to the Next Level by Naming a Day of Nationwide Mass Protest
   Press Statement
The Education Rights Campaign (ERC) welcomes the decision of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to engage in mass protests and demonstrations to further build support for the on-going strike. Recall that right from the first day of the strike the ERC had issued several public statements arguing for this very same strategy. We are confident that the strategy of mass action which has now been adopted by ASUU will go a long way to strengthen the strike and help popularise the striking lecturers' demands amongst the general populace.
Unfortunately however the protest actions by ASUU members have come under brutal attacks by the Nigerian police. On October 16, protesting members of ASUU at the Ebonyi State University (EBSU) were barricaded in their University premises by over 200 policemen obeying the orders of the Commissioner of Police to prevent the lecturers from marching on the streets of Abakaliki. Similarly on Monday 21 October, over 1000 policemen barricaded protesting lecturers of the University of Calabar (UNICAL) in their University premises. The police claimed to be acting on "orders from above". Also on Tuesday 22nd October 2013, Bayelsa Police prevented striking lecturers of the Niger Delta University (NDU) from holding a peaceful procession on the streets and threatened to arrest them. Equally on Thursday October 24 and Friday October 25, 2013 respectively at the Federal University of Technology Akure (FUTA) and Michael Okpara University of Agriculture Umudike, Abia State, peaceful protests by ASUU members were disrupted when policemen stormed and barricaded the campuses' entrance to prevent striking lecturers from taking their rallies into the towns.
We strongly condemn these attacks and the undemocratic restrictions imposed by the Police on protesting ASUU members across the country. The ERC believes Nigerians have the right to peaceful assembly. The idea that the police must first issue permit before an assembly can take place is an anachronistic and undemocratic carryover from Nigeria's colonial past and is not supported by the 1999 Constitution.
This condemnable and detestable treatment of University lecturers by the police is a national shame. It is nothing short of brutality and harassment. The Federal Government has completely lost any modicum of respect for the citizens. Is it not enough shame that our Universities have been shut for 4 months while academic activities in polytechnics are equally suspended in a country under the rule of an "elected" government? Now added to our Nation's roll call of ignominy is the ugly spectacle of a supposedly democratic government willfully ordering police armed with loaded guns, tear gas and horse whips to barricade its academics for simply exercising their democratic rights to freedom of assembly.
The Inspector General of Police obviously has questions to answer about these brutal attacks on democratic rights occurring right under the nose of a democratic government. In each of the three cases cited above, the Police have claimed they restricted the lecturers to their campuses to prevent hoodlums from hijacking their protests. The real reason however is that the government fear that the striking lecturers will get favourable response from the mass of students, youths and working people if they are able to take their protests into the streets and towns.
Few weeks ago, the same government and the same Police allowed a rented crowd of market women numbering hundreds to protest in Abuja and were even warmly received by a Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Education. Equally days ago, another crowd led by the leadership of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) closed down the Asaba Onitsha Axis of the Niger Bridge and held up traffic for hours under the protective watch of the Police. Now the only difference between the lecturers and the second group of protesters is that while the lecturers correctly blames the Federal Government for the crisis in the education sector and the inevitability of strike action, the latter obviously paid by the Federal Government and cleverly using the frustration of genuine students as smokescreen put all blames on ASUU.
While we support the right of everyone irrespective of their positions for or against the strike to peaceful assembly and protest, we have very good reasons to believe the police are guilty of selective clampdown on striking lecturers and all those who in their quest to rescue public education from collapse supports the ASUU and ASUP strikes.
We warn the Inspector General of Police to call his men to order and desist from harassing University lecturers who are on strike and are protesting to fight for better funding of public education and provision of facilities in schools. Unless Nigerians support ASUU and ASUP to win the struggle to save public education from underfunding and profiteering, Nigeria will continue to drift perilously into perfidy and anomie. Already reports have it that about 46 million adults are illiterate. Likewise, over 10.5 million school-age children are out of school. It is these ignoble conditions in our education sector that ASUU and its members are striking and fighting to reverse and for which they deserve support and solidarity, not police harassment and insult.

Hassan Taiwo Soweto                            Michael Ogundele
National Coordinator                              National Secretary
07033697259                                          07066249160

ERC Condemns Police Attacks on Protesting Primary School Pupils in Makurdi



    Sack the Benue State CP Now
NANS Has a Lot to learn From Benue Primary School Pupils

Press Statement

The Education Rights Campaign (ERC) condemns in strong terms the atrocious brutality meted by Police on protesting Primary School Pupils in Makurdi, Benue State on Thursday 24 October 2013. We demand the immediate removal of the State Commissioner of Police and his trial for ordering the firing of tear gas on little children. We call on Benue State Governor  Gabriel Suswam to tender an unreserved apology to the pupils and their parents and go ahead to immediately implement the N18,000 minimum wage law to teachers and all categories of workers in the State so schools can be reopened.

Interestingly the Governor of Benue State is no other than Gabriel Suswan who also chairs the Presidential Implementation Committee on NEEDS Assessment - a committee tasked with mediating in the strike of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). Considering Governor Gabriel Suswam's own track record of willful breaking of the minimum wage law which is a legal obligation binding on Federal and State governments, it is no surprise that the Committee failed woefully in its task and instead contributed to the elongation of the ASUU strike which is now in its fourth month. As the saying goes, you cannot give what you do not have. Governor Suswam's despicable treatment of teachers and brutal clampdown on primary school pupils in his own State says all there need to be said about his alleged concern for public education.

The primary school pupils protested against the state government and in support of their teachers organised under the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) who are on strike to demand implementation of N18,000 minimum wage law. They protested on the streets of Makurdi chanting: "No Teachers, No School". We commend the pupils for displaying an uncommon level of consciousness which enabled them to understand that their teachers' demands if met would translate to a better education sector.

Regrettably this level of political consciousness and understanding is lacking in the leadership of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) going by the pro-government utterances, conduct and attitude of the NANS President, Yinka Gbadebo since the strike of University teachers started. While the Benue State primary school pupils, despite being children, understood clearly that in a conflict between their teachers and the State government the latter is and would always be an enemy they would not under any circumstances support, Yinka Gbadebo is busy parroting government propaganda and blackmail against members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). While the Benue primary school pupils stood shoulder to shoulder with their teachers to jointly fight for the cause of their schools and public education, Yinka Gbadebo turned NANS into a pro-government body and offered it cheap to the State as a platform for the planning, ventilation and execution of all kinds of anti-ASUU intrigues instead of proudly and respectfully joining and placing its banners in the frontlines of the battle to save public education.

Despite being little children, the Benue State pupils have offered NANS and University students in general a brilliant example of where genuine students should stand during a battle to save public education. All talks by the Benue State police and the State government of teachers using pupils to fight their battle is arrant nonsense and insult to the intelligence of the pupils who clearly know that aside from underfunding public education the State government has been deliberately refusing to pay teachers the N18,000 minimum wage. NANS, as a body, need to learn from the example of the Benue State pupils, retrace its steps, break its links with the State and realign itself with ASUU, NUT, the trade union movement and all the progressive forces organising to struggle for the improved funding and revitalisation of public education.

We of ERC calls on the entire labour movement to publicly condemn the violent dispersal of the protesting primary school pupils by police.  Before now, we had warned of the creeping transmutation of the Jonathan's government into a bloody civilian dictatorship prepared to stifle every democratic initiatives of the working masses to defend themselves. However this new development in Benue State shows that it is not just the Jonathan's government but equally state and local council governments irrespective of political parties ruling them are fast becoming brazen, dictatorial and despotic in their bid to implement unpopular anti-poor policies.

The series of crimes and ignominy committed almost on a daily basis by this government in its bid to force down peoples throat the neo-liberal agenda of a privatised, neglected and commercialised education system as opposed to a public education system  has become alarming. For instance over the last two weeks, the Nigerian police has been hunting down, attacking and restricting striking lecturers and all those who support the on-going struggle of University and Polytechnic lecturers to save public education.

But compared to all these, the attacks on Benue primary school pupils is especially shocking, wicked and unconscionable. This chilling brutality on little children in Makurdi whose only crime was their support for their teachers struggle for better working conditions is a new low in the blood-stained record of the Nigerian Police. Despite their age, the pupils were brutally dispersed by police who shot tear gas canisters in their midst. That no one died is not an excuse to maintain silence on this matter. In any case, the  ERC does not feel we need to wait until little children are killed by police before speaking out.

Unless checked, we warn that these actions of the Police would be a precursor to more bloody clampdown in the coming period as the government continues to get more brazen. There must be a time when we all have to rise up to say enough is enough to the brutality and violence being daily committed by the government against Nigerian people.


                                                                                          
Hassan Taiwo Soweto                                                Michael Ogundele                          
National Coordinator                                                 National Secretary                        
07033697259                                                             07066249160