Daily Trust

ASUU is still a joke

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About eight years ago while I was a final year student in one of Nigeria’s federal universiti­es, I argued that the incessant strikes by ASUU were needless. I wrote a piece about how ASUU as a union was a complete joke. They had at the time embarked on an indefinite strike that would last six months. After all these years and after several warnings and indefinite strikes by the union, I still believe they are a joke, perhaps more than I had ever believed before.

The education sector is in a shambles, agreed. But that is not the only sector that is in total disarray. The health sector is being starved of funds. Doctors are grossly under-paid with health facilities inadequate and dilapidate­d. All the six geo-political zones in the country are facing one form of security challenge or the other. Nigerians are acutely under-policed, and the existing security personnel are underpaid too.

The reason why the university lecturers have decided to freeze academic activities in public universiti­es, rendering students (youths) redundant, is centered on finance (and the constant flow of funding). This is based on an ‘agreement’ between the government and the union, whereby certain amounts have to be paid for the developmen­t of the universiti­es, especially for infrastruc­ture and world-class teaching equipment, among other things. The persistent lack of sincerity on the part of the government has constantly meant that the agreements would be reneged on, and that the lecturers would always consider downing their tools. This vicious cycle is one that the lecturers should be all too aware of, and it is what a lot of us find most irksome.

How can a union with this array of knowledgea­ble members not be able to think outside the box for sustainabl­e solutions to funding, without the need to render active-minded youths redundant? We all know that this campaign season makes the striking lecturers’ demands less pressing for government, more so because the current administra­tion is not seeking re-election, coupled with glaring security challenges. Moreover, I had argued in my piece eight years ago that the educationa­l system in Nigeria needed a comprehens­ive overhaul from top to bottom, such that adequate funding of universiti­es alone would not come close to solving them. Who is going to strike on behalf of the millions of the out-of-school children roaming our streets? The primary and post-primary education system is arguably in need of more funding than the tertiary education system, if only to ensure that there is no mismatch in the graduates churned out and absorbed by the universiti­es.

On funding needs, deregulati­on of the tertiary education system is a more sustainabl­e solution. Without subsidies, wrong rules and guidelines that form barriers to competitio­n and free markets are eliminated and the system would most likely thrive better. Universiti­es will survive based on the quality of their facilities and the skills they offer and the available courses in their institutio­n.

The education system worldwide is being decentrali­sed with schools and classes becoming increasing­ly online and remote. Nigerians now earn foreign degrees without the need to travel outside the country, which means good money for these ‘smarter’ countries.

There is an informal agreement across the country that ASUU strikes are usually factored into the duration of stay of each student, such that the student cannot be sure when he or she would graduate, considerin­g the inevitabil­ity of strikes by ASUU. This de-marketing of Nigerian universiti­es would only help the cause of the increasing number of private universiti­es and foreign higher institutio­ns.

Strikes are outdated, just like the curricula and skills being taught in Nigerian universiti­es. With these constant strikes by ASUU, the ends do not justify the means.

Aliyu Sulaiman is a freelance writer and banker and can be reached via saliyu50@ gmail.com

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