Thursday, 18 September 2014

GRADUATES OF MOCPED MOAN NON-RELEASE OF RESULTS AND CERTIFICATES FOUR YEARS AFTER GRADUATION


ERC Demands  Immediate Release of Results and Certificates

Press Statement
The travail of graduates of the Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED) has come to the attention of the Education Rights Campaign (ERC). The graduates who applied for a degree program of the Institution which is affiliated to the Ekiti State University (EKSU) have not received their statements of their result and certificates four years after completing all academic activities.

Since 2006 when the degree program started, four sets have passed out without results and certificates. The current set of students offering the degree program may also face the same fate if something is not hurriedly done.

The ERC strongly condemns the authorities of the Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED) and the sister institution, Ekiti State University (EKSU), for the non-release of results and certificates to these affected graduates.

The delay in the release of their results and certificates has caused irreparable damage to the career and lives of these individuals. Many have had to make do with menial jobs in order to survive since it is impossible to get proper employment without tendering a certificate.

Results and certificates are evidential requirement certifying the conclusion of academic programs. As such they are fundamental rights of every students who have completed their academic activities within the stipulated period of time. Not releasing results and certificates to students after conclusion of academic activities, especially in the absence of a legitimate reason to do so like examination malpractice or non-payment of fees, is not only unlawful and a breach of the provisions of regulatory bodies, it is also a contravention of the fundamental rights of the students.

The ERC therefore calls on the authorities of MOCPED and EKSU o immediately release the results and certificates of all the affected graduates and also ensure the prompt and regular compilation of the results of all students currently offering the degree program such that their results can be immediately processed once they have completed all academic requirements for graduation.


                                                                                          
Hassan Taiwo Soweto                                            Michael Ogundele                          
National Coordinator                                            National Secretary                        
07033697259                                                                              

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

NANS AWARD TO PRESIDENT JONATHAN


A Gross Misrepresentation of Nigerian Students and Youths

09/09/2014
Press Statement
The Education Rights Campaign (ERC) totally condemns the Yinka Gbadebo-led leadership of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) for the award of Grand Commander of Nigerian Students to President Goodluck Jonathan.

This award is an embarrassment to the community of students and youth in Nigeria. The best response to this national shame is for students and activists on all campuses to rise up to reclaim the NANS from racketeers and careerists like Yinka Gbadebo and his gang. A return of NANS to the democratic and mass platform it used to be and with a leadership that is sufficiently bold enough to defend student interests is vital if the ongoing onslaught on public education in forms of fee hike and commercialisation is to be resisted.

Fearful of the widespread unpopularity of his pro-capitalist and viciously anti-poor government which has failed Nigerians in all ramifications, Jonathan and his handlers hope to use this award to rehabilitate his battered image in the run-up to the 2015 general elections. Like a drowning person, Jonathan is prepared to hang onto any straw. This is why despite the lack of credibility of NANS which most Nigerians derisively see as an association of non-students and unemployed youths, Jonathan is not in the least embarrassed to be identified with it. As the saying goes, birds of a feather flock together.

This award may have been conferred in the name of Nigerian Students. Certainly, it enjoys no endorsement and support of Nigerian students and youths. In 1988 when the students of Obafemi Awolowo University Ile-Ife were to confer on late Chief Gani Fawehinmi the award of Senior Advocate of the Masses (SAM), not only was the award ratified by the union parliament, Chief Gani Fawehinmi was invited to the campus where he received the award in the presence of thousands of students and the media. If the organisers of this national charade were confident of themselves, instead of taking the award to Aso Rock they should have invited President Jonathan to any campus of their choosing to receive the award.
                                                                   
In any case, this award will further strengthen the belief in many quarters that those who claim to be leaders of NANS are mostly non-students who are using the association to line their own pockets. Otherwise how could a genuine student, who is studying under inhumane academic environment as exists on all campuses across the country or who is faced with the prospect of losing their studentship as a result of outrageous fees, support President Jonathan or wish to have him continue in office beyond 2015?

Definitely, this award will anger millions of Nigerian Students and youths. This is not surprising. President Jonathan's government has been a failure in all ramifications. Its failure in the area of public education is embarrassing. From 7.3 million few years ago, the number of out-of-school children has increased to 10.3 million under President Jonathan's watch. If the situation in the North East is factored in, certainly the number of out-of-school children could be well above 12 million. Public Universities, Polytechnics and Colleges of Education were if taken together, closed for more than two years as a result of strikes caused by the government refusal to meet genuine demands of education workers. Despite the success of the ASUU strike in particular in forcing a marginal commitment to release N200 billion to fund public tertiary institutions, the government has responded with steep increases in fees. Students at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) whose fees have been jerked up would definitely not support an award purportedly presenting Goodluck Jonathan as a student-friendly President.

However this award is coming on the heels of a similar fraudulent award of Senior Advocate of Nigerian Students conferred on Governor Fashola of Lagos State by the Sunday Asefon-led Southwest (Zone D) leadership of NANS. Just like President Jonathan, Fashola and the APC badly needed an image laundering after the bitter defeat students and workers of the Lagos State University (LASU) gave them in the victorious struggle for reversal of hiked fees. For all its shallow radical posturing, the NANS Zone leadership is not so much different from the National Leadership of NANS. Both are simply two sides of a bad coin. While the NANS President Yinka Gbadebo and his team of racketeers represent the pro-People's Democratic Party (PDP) wing of NANS, the Asefon-led Zone D leadership is the pro-All Progressive Congress (APC) wing. What unites the two wings however is readiness to sell out students to the highest bidder.

The ERC considers both awards as a gross misrepresentation of Nigerian students who are burdened by skyrocketting tuition fees, a broken public education system and an uncertain future all which are direct results of the pro-market capitalist policies favoured by the governments of both President Jonathan and Governor Fashola.

As election approaches, the two main capitalist parties in Nigeria - PDP and APC - are falling over themselves in a competition to use education as a ruse to hoodwink the people again. But in reality, neither the PDP nor APC deserves the votes of students, youth and workers. Nigeria under the rule of either of these political parties will continue to retrogress, public education will continue to be underfunded and commercialised while majority of the people will continue to wallow in abject poverty in the midst inexhaustible wealth.

There is urgent need for the emergence of a mass working peoples' political alternative that can fight for socialist change. If a genuine political party that represents the 99% should exist today and is able to aggregate and give political expression to the palpable anger of students, youth and workers who are yearning for change, both the PDP and APC can be easily swept away in a deluge of mass uprising. It is to this end that the ERC supports the formation of the Socialist Party of Nigeria (SPN) and plays active role in building it as a credible and formidable platform.
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Hassan Taiwo Soweto                                            Michael Ogundele                          
National Coordinator                                            National Secretary                        
07033697259                                                                             






Thursday, 4 September 2014

MOCPED: A Basket of Crises



* Students Groan under Inadequate Facilities and Outrageous Fees
* Graduates of Degree Program Lament Non-Release of Result/Certificate Four Years after

By ERC Reporters

Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED) formerly known as Lagos State College of Primary Education (LACOPED) located in Epe is a teacher training college established in 1994.  

Today the College is an eyesore. In the first place, the College resembles nothing close to a tertiary institution. Actually there are some public secondary schools that can boast of better facilities and buildings than MOCPED. You only have to visit MOCPED to fully understand why there is low quality of teaching and mass failure of pupils.

The students, majority of who may have chosen the institution due to difficulty in gaining admission to better schools, are treated like cash cows to be milked dry. National Certificate of Education (NCE) students pay between N24, 600 and over N50, 000 yet they have no facilities for quality education.

In 2006/2007 academic session, the College decided to float a degree programme affiliated with the Ekiti State University (EKSU). Students under this program are divided into fulltime and sandwich categories, and they pay between N82,000 and N106,000 as fees. According to reports, current full-time students under the degree program are paying fees without being issued receipts. But that is not the whole story. Actually about eight years since the degree program began, the students that graduated (and there have been four graduating sets) have not received their results neither have they been issued certificates. It is four years now since the first set have graduated and yet no results. Unfortunately, no-one, except the management, knows what the problem is. The provost Prof. Olu Akeusola is not providing any answer to the enquries by students while EKSU too is keeping mum. However there is a prevalent belief that the reason for this state of affairs was the inability of MOCPED to keep up with payment to EKSU which is part of the agreement for the affiliated degree program.

On Friday 29, August 2014, a two-man delegation of the Education Rights Campaign (ERC) visited the institution on the invitation of graduates of the degree program of the College who are getting prepared to begin a campaign for the release of their results and certificates. The two comrades are H.T Soweto the National Coordinator and Dimeji Macaulay, member of ERC.

ERC members and MOCPED Students' Union Leaders
We arrived the school tired and hungry, and went in search of a canteen to eat. Three female students walked in to eat also and from there a conversation started which soon revealed to us the deep-seated anger among a majority of the students as well as the vendors. As the female students lamented the outrageous fees they are made to pay as tuition fees, the food vendor lamented the decline in patronage as many students cannot afford to eat out after paying such outrageous fees. This was well reflected in the quality of her food. Her meats are cut so small that they are no much bigger than a dose of panadol. But according to her "the students cannot afford to pay more than 20 Naira for meat and even at that several students buy food without meat". Another female student lamented how she often has to walk long distances because some weeks she cannot afford bus fares.

We first held a meeting with the newly-reinstated Students Union leadership which included key members of the union like the speaker of the union, PRO, Financial Secretary and General Secretary. It was an eye-opener. The Students Union speaker gave the situation report of the campus and the problems confronting the union and the students as a whole. She explained that the students union was just reinstated and they have been trying to put things together but the management is not helping matters. According to her, it seems that though the Management reinstated the union, it is making every effort to ensure it is ineffective. For instance the new leadership met no money in the union account and the management has refused to provide them with a take-off grant. The bus of the old Union has been converted by the Management to its use.

She mentioned other challenges confronting them ranging from underfunding to total neglect by the state government, E- portal payment, lack of internet service and so on. Recently the union took a step to call a meeting among students to make contribution on what they need and a communiqué was submitted to the management. Thereafter, the management called them for a meeting and promised to address some of the issues but there is the apprehension that nothing positive may come out of it.

A major weakness of the union is that its membership only extends to NCE students alone. The degree students are kept out even though their population is more than that of NCE students and it’s still increasing. Only the management will benefit from this kind of divisive arrangement as it will be able to play one section of students against another. Meanwhile all the students regardless of their program suffer from the same poor conditions of facilities on the campus and high fees. As the ERC delegation advised, the best way to begin to strengthen the union for the inevitable struggles ahead is to unite all NCE and Degree students under its umbrella. The first step in this direction should be a public statement by the union advocating issues affecting the degree students most especially fees and non-release of results. Others are public programs and activities on campus to build the consciousness of students.
ERC members and some of affected MOCPED degree program graduates
The second meeting started around 12 noon with the graduates of MOCPED/EKSU Degree program that have not been issued results for the past four years now. For some time now, the concerned individuals have been trying to organise themselves by holding regular meetings. According to them, those affected by the non-release of results are in thousands. However, only a few of them are actually taking active part at this stage. Also the current degree students are not playing any role in the movement. One of the key agreements at the meeting was the need to reach out to all those concerned including the present degree students. Also there is an urgent need for a campaign that can compel the authorities of EKSU, MOCPED and the Lagos State government to find ways to release their results.

The mood at the meeting indicated a determination to fight till victory. Many lamented what they have suffered over the years including lack of jobs due to the certificate. However, there is the need to get more people involved and build the movement further. At the end of the day, we agreed to launch a campaign to be called #ReleaseOurResults on Social Media, press campaign and letters to EKSU and MOCPED demanding the release of results and issuance of certificates to all those affected. Another meeting is to take place on Saturday 13 September 2014 to assess the struggle and other steps to be taken. A five-man committee was formed to handle the Social Media campaign. Twenty two (22) affected graduates attended the meeting. Five copies of Socialist Democracy (SD) - the paper of the Democratic Socialist Movement (DSM) were sold. One thousand, two hundred and seventy naira was raised as fighting fund to build and sustain the struggle.