We informed you when FG invoked the ‘No Work No Pay’ Policy against the striking lecturers (ASUU) and the reply from ASUU that the ‘No Work No Pay’ policy would not deter them
from continuing with the strike. They have now found a means to cushion
the effects of the ‘No Work No Pay’ policy used by the Federal
Government.
The atmosphere told the story, their
body languages hid their fears. At the ASUU UI congress on Thursday, the
discuss was not how to end the lingering 103-day old strike or its
effect on the students, but how members would survive while the strike
lasts.
The congress, which was snubbed by top
ASUU stalwarts in the University such as Professor Francis Egbokhare,
Dr. Chris Ogbogbo, Dr. ‘Sola Olorunyomi and Dr, ‘Doyin Odebowale,
started at about 10am and lasted till about 2pm with members of the
union resolved to sustain the strike for as long as it would go.
In attendance were Dr. Segun Aremu, ASUU
National Treasurer—who is allegedly aiming at the Union’s National
President’s Position, UI ASUU Chairman, Dr. ‘Segun Ajiboye, and other
local executive members of the Union and a handful of other staff. Also
in attendance was the University of Ibadan Vice Chancellor, Professor
Isaac Adewole who addressed the congress briefly before heading to
Abuja.
At the gathering, which a don referred
to as a platform for the expression of the lecturers’ greed, members
discussed how to survive while their salaries were being withheld in
line with the no-work-no-pay-rule, and resolved that the local Union’s
cooperatives shall begin to give loans to members who have been
contributing to the cooperative, while further deliberations would be
held with the management of the cooperative in the case of new members.
In his address to the congress,
Professor Isaac Adewole raised ASUU’s hope that the FG was ready to
shift grounds going by the series of meetings the Sambo-led committee,
which he is a part of, have had. The VC who noted that another meeting
was already schedule for Thursday Evening and Friday morning informed
the Union about the complaint of the FG with regard to the lackadaisical
attitudes of ASUU members to applying for the billions of Naira
available to the University in the TETFUND account both for research and
development, and suggested that it would be right for ASUU to be
prepared to shift grounds too in their supposed struggle.
A don who spoke with Campus Times after
the congress regretted that the struggle has been reduced to what the
Union will benefit from the strike with no regard for the plights of the
students who are the innocent victims of the crisis. “My colleagues
will always say that the struggle would eventually be to the benefit of
our students, but if you have followed our congress so far since the
strike began, not once has the congress discussed the plight of our
students. It is always about the earned allowance. Many of my colleagues
have built castles in their mind with the earned allowance before
getting it so it is either they get the earned allowance or the system
crumbles,” he said.
Another don who was quite philosophical
in his approach said the union has reduced itself to nothing more than a
gathering of garage thugs. According to him, “you don’t argue with a
fool lest you yourself become a fool. If the FG has decided to make
itself a fool, ASUU should not have descended into the same arena with
them”.
In his own reaction, Dr. ‘Demola Lewis
said students should not be in a hurry to see the strike called off if
the FG would not grant the lecturers’ demands. “If we rush you back to
school now, you’ll still stay at home for 5 or more years before you get
a job after graduating because they say you are not employable so let’s
get it right first.” He said.
Meanwhile students of the University of
Ibadan, especially the final year students, are already lamenting over
the protracted industrial action by ASUU. A final year Chemistry student
who spoke with Campus Times complained about the fact that the
materials she had acquired for her final year research work were already
becoming useless. Another student informed our correspondent that he
had been spending fortune on feeding the albino rats he had bought for
his final year project as he could not continue his research because of
the lingering ASUU strike. Both students pleaded with the union to call
off its strike in the interest of the students as many of their
colleagues were already frustrated by the 1103-day old strike.
A new twist in the development, Campus
Times gathered, is the plan by landlords in UI areas to increase their
rents as soon as the year is over. Some students who resides in the
Agbowo area, close to the University, informed Campus Times that their
landlords had already informed them that they should be ready for a
slight increase in their rent following the economic situation in the
country. Kola, a final year student of UI, inform CT that “my landlord
recently cemented the passage in the house and just a week after he was
done, he simply told me that he would be increasing the rent from the
current N65,000 to N85,000 in the coming year. I did not plan to stay in
the house beyond this year as I had thought that by November, I would
have graduated, see what ASUU has caused me now?”. Kola’s story was
buttressed by Seun, another final year student who said she was already
looking for someone to squat with till the end of the session as her
parent already told her that they could not afford another year’s rent.
“My landlord recently called me and asked when I was going to graduate, I
thought he was pitying my plight and I told him we are still hoping
that ASUU would call of their strike so that I can finish my last
semester and leave Ibadan. But the man simply told me that he plans to
renovating the house so he would have to increase the rent by next year.
I did not even bother to call home because I already know what the
reply will be, right now, I am just going to look for somewhere to squat
till the end of the session.” She said.
In the meantime, the National
Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has threatened to expose ASUU’s
greed should the Union fails to call off its industrial action soon. The
NANS President, Comrade Yinka Gbadebo who spoke with journalists in
Abuja recently, said that the union’s demands were egocentric and that
this attitude has so far been largely responsible for the corruption and
rot in the university system.
A member of the student body criticized
ASUU for being insensitive to the plights of the Nigerian students. The
student was particularly disappointed in the UI ASUU chairman, Dr.
Ajiboye over a recent statement credited to him that “students would
graduate as and when due”. According to him, “is this the best leader UI
lecturers could produce? Someone who leaves issues and attacks
personalities, someone who always stand logic on its heads and speaks
flawed English language. I am disappointed in the Union. What does he
mean by students would resume as and when due when the Union has been on
strike for over 3months? Like he told Bishops Orisajafor, I think this
man is himself suffering from diarrhea of the mouth” he said.
A don who agreed with NANS informed CT
that “just like the President said, in a sane world, why should state
universities join a strike in which Federal institutions are fighting
the FG? Of what academic value would it be to the Union if the FG
transfers its landed property in the Universities to the Universities?
And why should the union be fighting and threatening to crumble the
system because of increased investment in infrastructure in the
Universities when the managements of many of these institutions have not
been able to account for what they have got so far? The earned
allowance issue is like a gateman asking his boss for allowances for
opening and closing the gate, what was he paid to do? So for marking
scripts and supervising projects lecturers want to be paid bogus
allowances or they will crumble the system, if this is the idea running
in our ivory towers don’t you see that the country is finished? Nobody
considers the students anymore.”
The Nigerian Tribune had also lent its
voice in criticizing ASUU over its protracted strike. In its editorial
on Oct. 2, the newspaper said: “It is no longer possible to dismiss the
suspicion that ASUU is playing politics with the strike because of its
adamant position in the face of the conciliatory approach taken by the
Federal Government.”
As more and more criticizing continue to
dog the 103-day old industrial action by ASUU, only time will tell what
will become of ASUU when it eventually accedes to Nigerians’ plea that
the Union should seek an alternative means of pushing its demands before
the Federal Government.

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