UNIVERSITY teachers replied yesterday to
Senate President David Mark’s comments on the 2009 agreement, which
they are asking the Federal Government to implement.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities
(ASUU) explained how the agreement was signed. ASUU has been on strike
for over four months.
The union’s National Treasurer, Dr.
Demola Aremu, said President Goodluck Jonathan was part of a long-drawn
negotiation in 2009, which was reviewed in 2002 in a Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU).
Mark said the government officials who
signed the agreement “did not know their right from their left” and that
the ASUU officials who negotiated exploited their ignorance.
Aremu said ASUU had rejected the pleas
from senators to call off their strike. He advised the lawmakers to beg
President Jonathan to implement the agreement.
Aremu recalled that it took ASUU and the
Federal Government team, led by Mr Gamaliel Onosode, three years to
arrive at the agreement, pointing out that it is pretentious for any top
government functionary to claim that the government negotiating team
did not understand fully what they signed with the teachers.
According to him, ASUU went to the
negotiation with a 300-page charter, which was reduced to a 60-page
agreement after the union shifted so much ground on many of its demands.
He said Dr. Jonathan, who was then the
Vice President, asked the government to sign the agreement after
thoroughly going through it for six months.
“He perused the draft agreement and
asked the government team to sign every page of the document. Our
President also signed it. The content of the agreement we have today is
not what we took to the negotiation table. That shows Nigerians how
greatly we’ve shifted ground. So, the team knew what they went into.”
Aremu explained that the Federal
Government also came up with a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on the
implementation of the agreement in January last year. He asked: “So, if
anyone assumes that they didn’t know what they were doing in 2009, did
they also not know what they were doing in 2012?”
The union leader compares Nigeria’s
tertiary education with a cancer patient. He said no palliative measure
could help heal cancer, pointing out that the patient will die.
“Begging will not bring any solution.
Nigerians should rather beg government to face this agreement squarely
and implement it. That is where our future lies,” Aremu said.
He said senators could also cut their allowances and contribute them to education for the benefit of all citizens.
The union also urged the National
Assembly to go beyond “begging” ASUU to call off its strike, but plug
spending leakages in government to allow for provision of needed
infrastructure in the universities.
The union also lashed out at the Vice
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Prof. Sola Adeyeye, over
his comments on why a professor will demand payment to supervise
postgraduate students.
A statement by the University of Ibadan
(UI) chairman of the union, Dr Olusegun Ajiboye, titled: “The goofing
Professor Adeyeye: Senate and begging comments”, said Adeyeye was using
public funds to train his children abroad, besides lacking in knowledge
of the situation in Nigerian universities.
Ajiboye described Mark’s statement that
ASUU will lose public sympathy, if it does not call off its strike, as
“a careless talk” because, according to him, the Senate has already lost
its credibility among Nigerians over its huge allowances and its
perpetual anti-masses stance as opposed to the progressives in the House
of Representatives.
“We are fighting a just cause. Can the
senators wait for four years of their tenure before their allowances are
paid? Can the Senate members sit in the chambers without air
conditioners? What role has the Senate played to increase budgetary
allocation to education? It is even funny for the Senate President to
feign ignorance of the ASUU agreement as the sitting Senate President in
2009,” Ajiboye said.
ASUU said people, such as Adeyeye, ought
to keep quiet when education is being discussed as “his immediate
family members are not in Nigeria with all his children schooling and
living abroad, using the millions of public funds being earned by their
father in Nigeria to live large abroad.
“As a professor at the Duquesne
University USA, Professor Adeyeye enjoyed flexible single and family
healthcare coverage, including vision and dental insurance, disability
benefits and life insurance, tuition remission for employees and family
members, retirement savings plan with a generous eight per cent
university contribution for employees with immediate vesting schedule,
family leave, paid time off for vacation and holidays and unpaid time
for personal leave of absence, comprehensive employee training
programmes which promote professional development, access to a
recreation centre and wellness programme.
“The question Prof Adeyeye should answer
is, where in Nigeria does a professor enjoy all these with conducive
learning environment? What is the ratio of students to a lecturer in
Nigerian universities? Where else in the world will a professor
supervise up to 35 students in a session?”
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