THISDAY

ASUU: Ruling Class Causing Hardship to Lecturers, Students to Destroy PublicVars­ities

- Emmanuel Ugwu-Nwogo

The Academic Staff Union of Universiti­es(ASUU) yesterday raised the alarm over alleged deliberate moves by the ruling political class to destroy Nigeria's public universiti­es by "piling hardships" on lecturers and students.

ASUU President, Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke warned of what he termed a looming danger, at a press conference held at the Michael Okpara University of Agricultur­e

Umudike(MOUAU), Abia State.

He said that the ploy was to kill off public universiti­es to pave the way for private universiti­es to thrive just like the public primary and secondary schools were killed and the private ones sprung up to dominate the levels of education.

Osodeke said that the National Executive Council(NEC) of ASUU held its meeting at the weekend at the Niger Delta University, Bayelsa State during which it reviewed its engagement­s with federal and state government­s and was "seriously alarmed" at the worsening situations.

He noted that ASUU had continued to engage with government "on how to reposition Nigeria's public universiti­es for global reckoning by arresting the living and working conditions in the universiti­es and the nation at large".

However, the ASUU president lamented that instead of seeing reason with the Nigerian academics, the ruling class with investment­s in private education has decided to adopt "chronic pauperisat­ion and failed promises" to emasculate the ivory towers.

He said: "It appears members of the Nigerian ruling class are totally indifferen­t to the implicatio­ns of the continued pauperisat­ion of academics for the Nigerian dream and the future of the country.

"If they truly love Nigeria, they must have realised that no nation can truly be greater than the quality and commitment of its scholars.

"In other climes of nationalis­tpoliticia­ns and patriots, no government takes deliberate steps to kill the collective bargaining principle nor ignore the patriotic demands of its academics".

Osodeke said that the engagement­s of ASUU with the present government of Bola Tinubu has yielded no positive results but a harvest of "failed promises" as it has continued with the "serial insensitiv­ity" of past government­s.

As a mark of goodwill and assured hope for Nigeria's public universiti­es, ASUU "for the umpteenth time" called on the Tinubu administra­tion to set in motion the process of reviewing and signing the Nimi Briggs-led renegotiat­ed draft agreement.

Osodeke stated that ASUU had been without a renegotiat­ed agreement with the federal government since 2009 and past efforts were scuttled by government's refusal to sign the draft agreement.

"Nigerian academics are tired of platitudes laced with disdain for intellectu­als; only concrete steps to restore their eroded dignity and degraded lives can guarantee lasting peace on our campuses," he said.

On the hike in fees, the ASUU leader stated that NEC condemns in its entirety the wave of fee hike without inputs of the victims across our campuses, adding that it would jeopardise aspiration­s of many students.

He insisted that students and their

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