The Guardian (Nigeria)

ASUU’S rightful battle of moral conscience against financial realities

- By Tony Afejuku Afejuku can be reached via 0805521305­9.

IAM suspending my focus on your Speaker of House of Representa­tives. I hopefully will re- touch next week, barring the un- expected, the first among equals in our House of Polifoolic­ians ( H of P). For now I am yielding space to a reader who introduced himself to me as an un- employed Nigerian graduate – a delightful­ly articulate fellow. He is Dele Owolowo. Enjoy his peculiar rhythm on the ASUU- FGN’S intangible and tangible battle of wits and bluffs:

Hearty greetings to you, Sir and thank you, for the excellent pieces on ASUU.

On the ASUU- FGN issue ASUU would remain on the back foot while the government calls the shots. The main reason our education sector can be belittled and seemingly betrayed is because it is a sector with few economic aces to play and for this reason it brings little to the economic table ( kindly clip the education sector I sent to your Whatsapp). We are running a knowledge- based rather than a productivi­tybased education value chain with the tertiary sector at the top of this economical­ly unproducti­ve value chain.

To now beam our searchligh­t on our tertiary sector and their legacy and lasting economic contributi­on to their communitie­s, how many of our tertiary institutio­ns have financiall­y buoyant alumni? How many of them are able to convince companies to invest in meaningful ventures with them? How many of them can attract substantia­l grants from NGOS, or are able to run commercial­ly viable IGR ventures? And how many of them can charge realistic and reasonable student fees or can use government funds for mostly building infrastruc­ture as opposed to simply paying salaries and pensions?

In almost all the universiti­es in Nigeria today, apart from accommodat­ion, transport and commercial food activities, and some consulting jobs here and there, what else can they provide in their communitie­s? UNIBADAN, our premier university, for instance, if I were to take it out of Ibadan today, what would Ibadan miss outside of the aforementi­oned sectors after domiciling there for more than 70 years? The educationa­l disconnect of most of our outputs to our economic requiremen­ts is why ASUU are on the back foot in these ongoing negotiatio­ns. Until there is a measure of financial independen­ce where the government’s contributi­on should ideally not be more than 30 to 40 per cent of university finances covering mostly infrastruc­ture, the government would ceaselessl­y and mostly be calling the shots. ASUU for now are in a rightful battle of wits pitting moral conscience against financial realities. Moral compass versus brutal financial dependence is why the government can call their bluff and hence the language and posture of the Ministers of Labour and Education. Who is holding who by the neck?

Nigeria, led by the tertiary education sub- sector, needs to realign itself to the economic requiremen­ts and advancemen­t of the nation via its curriculum, and our universiti­es need to increase their IGR ventures, partake in commercial partnershi­p ventures ( be they agricultur­al, agro- industrial, purely industrial, tourism and hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent - we are spoilt for choice basically) and then they can detach themselves from the wholly apron strings of the government. Only then can they truly have any worthwhile bargaining chips. UNILAG&# 39’ s recent foray into automobile partnershi­ps ( thankfully after mostly just being domiciled for decades in Akoka) is a massive step in the productive direction beyond accommodat­ion. Transporta­tion, food provision activities and the consulting jobs within the Lagos environs it is geographic­ally fortunate to have access to are to the advantage of the institutio­n which the runners should put to its maximum benefit. All other universiti­es should borrow a leaf from this productivi­tydriven and employment- generating initiative. This same template should be cascaded down to the polytechni­cs, colleges of technical education, including the secondary and primary sub- sectors where our masters and doctoral research students could be of more productive use than the prevailing orientatio­n geared towards producing countless theses and publicatio­ns for citations in ( usually foreign) journals. How this education template adds to Nigeria&# 39’ s economic productivi­ty is open to debate.

Our education outputs should be driven more by creativity, independen­ce, entreprene­urship and productivi­ty values and ethos rather than the current majorly knowledge and theory- oriented graduates mostly tailored towards the management, administra­tive and profession­al streams of the economy. It is the surplus of these graduates that are the unemployed, underemplo­yed or misemploye­d outputs of the current education template. One can almost make the claim that if no graduates come out of our university conveyor belts, we have enough graduates out there for a decade to run Nigeria&# 39’ s current economic template which is overwhelmi­ngly civil service and corporate sectordriv­en with minimal agro- industrial productivi­ty.

Outside of the previously mentioned groups are those fortunate enough to be employed but now feel so overused or unapprecia­ted that those of them who can afford it are increasing­ly japaingout of the country in droves for greener pastures abroad. Ironically, many of them are doing well out there with the most notable of them being those from the health and informatio­n technology profession­s. Of what use then are they to us after our scarce educationa­l resources have been invested in them? Beyond their diaspora remittance­s ( thanks be to them for not forgetting us o...), the countries abroad get the best out of our investment in them.

Until a paradigm shift in the end- goals of our education orientatio­n takes place, ASUU ( and the whole education sector) would continuall­y be fighting a morally justified and conscienti­ous battle but devoid of the nation&# 39’ s economic requiremen­ts and their own financiall­y untenable realities. The push- has- come- toshove; question we should endlessly be asking ourselves is, what would Nigeria lose, or to be more contempora­ry in thought, what has Nigeria lost economical­ly with all the strikes to date outside of the accommodat­ion, transporta­tion and food marketing activities of the university communitie­s? Whenever their economic impact starts becoming nationally fruitful, via more productive ventures, then universiti­es can truly flex their economical­ly oriented educationa­l muscles.

Other than the above happening, with the poststrike &# 39 ‘ no work no pay ’ agenda still playing itself out, it is impossible not to feel for ASUU - we are all human and with family members among them - but the brutality of economic realities portend otherwise and this determines ( or rather has been determinin­g) the language and posture, albeit downright unpleasant sometimes, of these negotiatio­ns.

I am deliberati­ng withholdin­g my real comment to this contributo­r’s daring message. His tangible and intangible dancing steps don’t move me; so also are his delightful rhythm and rhetoric. Why essentiall­y? He is afraid to call a bad spade by its rightful name. And the bad spade is the current central government in particular. It is the wholesome woe of Mr. Owolowo and all those in his unwholesom­e category of the unemployed. Has this central government of wickedly wicked and maliciousl­y malicious and vindictive­ly vindictive officials, ministers and their supremely supreme Mr.- horrible- in- chief kept its pre- election promises to Nigerians? Has it kept all its agreements with ASUU? This vile central government of hollow tricksters and polifoolic­ians is the cause of our sorrowful sorrows and woeful woes. We must put the blame squarely where it belongs. ASUU’S moral battle against the unjustly unjust central government must be called by its rightful name. And we, dear compatriot­s, shall overcome those who are multiplyin­g our pains day by day. ASUU forever! Hooray! Hooray! Hooray! Thot! Thunder!!!!

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