Sayo Aluko
121 days, or is it 130, okay, now I have lost count. Yes, like most concerned minds, I have lost count of the number of days that the nation's tertiary arm of education has been kept crippled by this now shamefully lingering bout between the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Federal government of Nigeria (FGN).
To say the least from a critically thought-out angle, the whole jostle has been reduced to a mere war of sentiments from the coffers of these two entities that have both succeeded in confusing their priorities. Truth be told, this puerile battle has gone too far, too unnecessary, and too far-flung, that all I personally see now is more or less like unintended connivance by these two, to maim dear Nigeria's future.
121 days, or is it 130, okay, now I have lost count. Yes, like most concerned minds, I have lost count of the number of days that the nation's tertiary arm of education has been kept crippled by this now shamefully lingering bout between the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Federal government of Nigeria (FGN).
To say the least from a critically thought-out angle, the whole jostle has been reduced to a mere war of sentiments from the coffers of these two entities that have both succeeded in confusing their priorities. Truth be told, this puerile battle has gone too far, too unnecessary, and too far-flung, that all I personally see now is more or less like unintended connivance by these two, to maim dear Nigeria's future.
When two
parties have discrepancies, it is a generally accepted bitter-truth that the
only potent and efficient tool to sort out such discrepancies is sane
diplomacy, but, it is pitiable, it is tear-trickling, it is wail-worthy and
very shameful that the FGN and ASUU in whom the hallowed sanctity of the
nation's steady growth has been entrusted, have failed to use this sane
diplomacy, and rather opted for a retrogressive approach. They have both failed
woefully in seeing how quintessential stabilized education truly is in itself,
and how stupid perennial industrial actions like this present one, do hamper
all good intent(s) whatsoever, that they both claim to have.
Firstly, that
the FGN allowed the whole issue get this miry, has once again, further proven
their legendarily peerless incompetence. But, more surprisingly or perhaps,
more absurdly, that the ASUU, a supposed and self-acclaimed "body of
technocrats and intellectuals", (I've had to second-guess that claim in
the recent turn of events) reduced itself to the level of a mere trade or labour
union, and chose to use a blunt weapon of lengthy strikes to state their
displeasure and to address the issue, while not considering the far weightier
effects of such strike actions on the whole nation, proves how surprisingly
blind, stubbornly bland and obstinately non-innovative the ASUU itself is. (at
least, at the moment)
The unsettling
anarchy in the mind, the incomprehensible lethargy of spirit, the debasing
apathy towards knowledge acquisition, the multiple jeopardy to the future, the
brain-sickening idleness, the irreversible breach of soulful productivity, the
costly halt to the development of human capital, the foundational and
structural damage to the nation's growth and economy, and other likes, are the
graver, weightier and most importantly, irreversible, effects of these
perennial strike actions that continually plague the lives of the million
number of youths in our 61 tertiary institutions (far weightier than the
clichéd notion of students having to delve into criminal activities and prostitution).
Had the ASUU considered the irreversibility of these effects, the option of
another lengthy strike action wouldn't have been chosen over sane diplomacy.
I've had to
peruse through the now infamous "2009 agreement" that serves as the
bone of contention in all of these ASUU-FGN quagmire, and the acceptable truth
is that most of the positions agreed therein are implementable, asides few
ambiguities that can be taken care of by simple re-evaluation and oversight.
The core intent of that agreement is clearly meant for good and thus, poised at
preventing most or all the (weightier) effects listed above if implemented
normally. But, while it is regrettable that the FGN would have to be reminded of
its important responsibility towards education, I am just so sure, like most
people would probably agree too, that the ASUU could definitely use better
options to "remind" the FGN, rather than the constant application of
strike actions that foment the same untoward effects the ASUU intends to
prevent, and this glaringly depicts confusion on their part.
The ASUU has
vowed, more or less, "boasted" that they are ready to keep on with
the strike even as long like Ghana's "exemplary" two-year education
hiatus, while describing the vow as a sacrifice they are ready to pay to bring
Nigeria's education back on the right track. This ASUU's sacrifice-themed stance
is good, but is clearly flawed while weighed on the scale of the theory of
risk-versus-benefit. In this broadly applicable theory, it is known that while
thinking about implementing any procedure or action whatsoever, the moment the
risks/damages of implementing such procedure far outweigh the benefits, such
procedure is dropped at the expense of seeking a wiser/less risky option. I
believe a "body of technocrats and intellectuals" should know this,
because, as said above, the risks/weightier effects of these strikes are sadly
irreversible, and as such make them far outweigh the (true) benefits that the
ASUU seek, and thus, still invalidates the notion of lengthy strike actions.
Furthermore,
one other thing that worries the mind is that, not many people are asking the "University of Ilorin (UNILORIN)" question. As it were, UNILORIN, being one of
the tertiary universities in Nigeria, are also supposed to partake in the ASUU
strike(s), but, as we all know, they do not. Most of the universities across
the country were about 3-4 weeks into their 2nd semesters when this present
strike action kicked-off, and while the other students have had to languish at
home since then, UNILORIN has not only finished that semester, but they've
graduated the finalists therein and also had a convocation to celebrate them
(just last-week). Few questions to ask now:
1. Is UNILORIN graduating reprobates? Answer
is No.
2. Does UNILORIN need more funding from FGN
too? Answer is Yes.
3. Will UNILORIN benefit from the
implementation of the 2009 agreement? Answer is Yes.
4. But then, is UNILORIN on strike now?
Answer is NO!
So, why must
the lengthy strikes be the option (for other schools)? Why? Let's just stop
begging the question abeg.
Whatever
happened to innovation and sensible diplomacy!!!
Let's not get
carried away though, because, as I stated in my last article, that, it only
took a beast of leaders in the FGN to allow education standards get this bad,
hence, forcing ASUU's hands to make these ischemic decisions of strikes. And
so, while we put our noses to the grind in the hope of having sagacious leaders
in government, all we beseech ASUU to do at this time is a thorough re-critical
reconsideration of their approach to lifting Nigeria's education to a pride of
place. They should sit back, retreat, reconvene, but not surrender. ASUU should
come to a place where they'd acknowledge that 21st century education has even
evolved away from just the teaching of the human brain, into a higher realm of
the arming of the human mind, and so making sure that, while we are still stuck
with standardizing the former, we shouldn't retrogress in that process by
engaging in perennially lengthy strikes.
To the students
already enrolled in the schools, time has gone; to the intending students, time
is going and morale is waning, and to the ASUU, time is now to shake-off
confusion within your reins and stop seemingly “conniving” with the FGN to
worsen matters (your good shouldn't be staged as bad). To the FGN, time is now
to cut to the chase and invest in the surest investment ever, education! (the
money is available!). Also, I believe time is now for the FGN to draw up
policies that will increase private sector investment into education by sheer
obligation and/or adoption; for example, policies that will make
telecommunication companies do better than what they do now. I personally don't
know why MTN (s0rry I used a name, couldn't help it) will give #200,000 each to roughly 400-500
scholarship students yearly, and then give #40,000,000 - #60,000,000 or so, to
a Limpopo or Skelewu "Masters" holder.
Finally, for
some of us who are of the opinion that the year is already gone, that it is
already Christmas and "New-year" period, that nothing else can be
achieved again this year by both the ASUU and the FGN as touching the strike,
for us as such, I say much can be done in the seven weeks, and I pray that
Divinity will deliver us such, from pathologic laziness! Say "amen".
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