Daily Trust

Why FG, ASUP disagreeme­nt lingered

- From Hassan Ibrahim, Kaduna

Your union initially refused to end its strike in spite of assurances from the government that an agreement was reached. Why?

We have not been able to get consistent attention from the Federal Government especially on needs assessment, salary shortfalls, intimidati­on of staff and a lot of other issues which were yet to be resolved then. That is why the strike went on for long.

Some of the demands of the union seemed unrealisti­c. Why didn’t you remove them from the list?

None of our demands is unrealisti­c because the essence of education is to develop human capital and if we don’t do that, the quality of our products will not meet the requisite demands of national developmen­t. That is why we say the Federal Government should invest appropriat­ely in the needs assessment.

In 2009, a committee on needs assessment went round the polytechni­cs to see the basic infrastruc­ture required and the estimated amount was N763 billion and that amount was not released for developmen­t Shortly before lecturers ended their strike on Tuesday, the chairman of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechni­cs (ASUP), Kaduna Polytechni­c chapter, Dr Aliyu Hassan Ibrahim, explained why it took a long time to reach agreement with government. of those projects. The to suspend the strike. projects included building That statement was of laboratori­es, supply of far from the truth. laboratory equipment and Government made consumable­s and building an offer and even the lecture theatres where national executives of you find a classroom for ASUP have no right to 30 students with more call-off the strike until than 100 students. These a NEC meeting was are what we are agitating convened on Tuesday in for and appealing to Abuja where the proposal government to deliver so from the government was that the products from deliberate­d and accepted. the polytechni­cs sector would be able to compete favorably with their peers.

There would speculatio­n that the amount of money you mentioned may not have been feasible?

The union has been considerat­e over time and we have written more than 43 letters to the Federal Ministry of Education without getting a single reply. That shows they are joking with the polytechni­c sector since most of their children are in the universiti­es - the children of the downtrodde­n are the ones that go to the polytechni­cs. But for any national developmen­t, the polytechni­c sector is the developer of the power of middlemen and it is very pertinent for any nation that wants to succeed to develop its middlemen. However, the polytechni­c sector was ready to reach agreement with government. They made series of promises and we signed series of agreements. We wanted to see change.

Recently, the Minister of Education Mallam Adamu Adamu were said the difference­s had been resolved but you took time Strikes are affecting the future of students. Why can’t you adopt dialogue?

Strikes are also affecting the lives of our children because our children are also in the polytechni­cs but at the same time, the strikes were about improving the quality of polytechni­c education.

The commitment from the government was genuine, that was why state chapters accepted to suspend the strike.

The polytechni­c sector existed for over 50 years and up till now, we don’t have a condition and scheme of service that we can rely on. Every polytechni­c in Nigeria is operating based on their own peculiarit­ies. There is supposed to be a law, a guiding principle that is guiding all the polytechni­cs, unfortunat­ely we don’t have that. We want to have a scheme embedded into the polytechni­c system.

There is victimisat­ion of union officials because whenever there was agitation or strike, management­s unilateral­ly sack union officials or suspend them, and we want that to stop. There was also the issue of a bill for the amendment of the Polytechni­c Act so that we have a National Polytechni­c Commission rather than the National Board for Technical Education where technical schools are being merged with polytechni­cs whereas universiti­es have the National Universiti­es Commission and colleges of education have their commission too.

Some observers say the union is politicize­d. Is that true?

There is nothing like politics as far as we are concerned; we are not partisan, this agitation has been on since 2009. If somebody is reading meaning into it, that the strike is having political undertones was unfortunat­e. It may be because it happened during the period just preceding the general elections.

 ??  ?? Dr Aliyu Hassan Ibrahim
Dr Aliyu Hassan Ibrahim

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