ASUU tells parents, students what to do as strike continues

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The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has appealed to
parents and students to be patient over its decision to reposition and
save the country’s university system from total collapse.

ASUU National President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, made the appeal in an
interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on Thursday.

DAILY POST recalls that the university lecturers had, embarked on strike, demanding for the implementation of the 2009 agreement it entered into with the Federal Government.

Ogunyemi said that the strike was not to short-change neither the
students nor the parents and other key stakeholders but to save the
country’s university system from collapse.

He said, “We want to call on our students and parents to show understanding with our struggle as we are in this together.

“The whole essence of this struggle is to ensure that our students
get worthy and deserving certificates that they will be proud of
anywhere they may find themselves in the world.

“The struggle is to ensure too that we save Nigerian universities
from going the way our public primary and secondary schools have gone.

“Today, most parents are sending their children and wards to private
primary and secondary schools around the country because of the
perceived or alleged falling standards.

“We do not want our universities to go same way because a lot of our
parents may not be able to afford the private university fees.

The National President also stated that there was an urgent need for
both the Federal and State Governments to reconsider their approach
towards the development of universities in the country, to avoid an
outright collapse in the near future.

“The sad thing now is that the World Bank is giving funds to some private universities to thrive over public universities.

“Unless Nigerians rise to the occasion and join ASUU in putting
pressure on both the Federal and State Governments to pay adequate
attention to our universities, secondary and primary schools, we may be
facing a total collapse of our educational sector.

However, he said that university students might be staying longer at
home as no concrete resolution had been reached with the Federal
Government so far.

‘’The representatives of the union met with the Federal Government on Monday, Nov. 26 but that the meeting ended in a deadlock.

“We met on Monday in order to reach an agreement on the key issues we
are agitating for but nothing tangible came out of the meeting.

“Rather than come out with firm commitment on what to do about these
demands, they were appealing to us to go back to the classrooms while
they tackle the issues; and to us they have missed the point.

“We were told that the negotiation will continue on Friday, Nov. 30
but up till now, as we speak, I have not received any notice of meeting
to that effect,’’ he said.

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