The lingering industrial strike
action by the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU comes with a lot of cost for both students
and lecturers.
Two months after the Academic Staff
Union of Universities, ASUU embarked on an industrial action, the
negotiations between the union and the Federal Government is still deadlocked.
Like professor and Dean, Faculty of
Arts, University of Lagos, UNILAG, Yomi Akinyeye,
noted, ‘one cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs.’ In other words, one
cannot achieve something without causing a few inconveniences.
According to Akinyeye, the strike
will not only affect the students and the lecturers, but also the country’s
economy, in the long run.
“Most of the problems that Nigeria
is currently facing would have been better solved if the issues are properly
addressed and the priorities set right. The academic calendar of the students
has already been disrupted. This would mean the adjustment of their time table
and a delay in their year of graduation. The man hours lost over this period
would have to be paid for,” Akinyeye noted.
Considering the duration of the
strike, which has lingered since July 1, the total sum in salary for the
lecturers may run into billions of naira.
The strike also has a spiral effect
on the nation’s education and economic sector, noted professor of
Science and Technology education, University of Lagos, UNILAG, Duro Ajeyalemi.
He stated that while the dreams of
many students in their final year have invariably been put on hold, the delay
in the University academic
calendar will also increase the competition among candidates willing to gain admission into the Universities.
These factors will also cause an
increase in the number of fresh graduates in the labour market at the end of
the academic year, he said.
“Because the devil also finds work
for ideal hands, these students may be getting involved in other things that
may not be good for the economy; those who are just idling about at home could
cause security problems,” Ajeyalemi said.
The earlier the Federal Government
resolved the matter, the better for the economy, Ajeyalemi advised.
“It was the government that promised N400bn over a couple of years, starting with the release of N100bn as at that time (2009). But they have not done that. Also, the allowances were part of the agreement signed. So what ASUU is simply asking for is the implementation of the agreement. It is a matter of give and take,” he said.
“It was the government that promised N400bn over a couple of years, starting with the release of N100bn as at that time (2009). But they have not done that. Also, the allowances were part of the agreement signed. So what ASUU is simply asking for is the implementation of the agreement. It is a matter of give and take,” he said.
Even students that believe in ASUU‘’s struggle are tired of sitting at home. An
undergraduate student of the University of Lagos, UNILAG, Joshua Oyeniyi,
wrote: “I write on behalf of the millions of dreams that are getting squashed
by the day as the total shut-down of our Universities persists. I write on behalf of the
future of the several hundreds of thousands who have been privileged, amidst
the stiff competition for admission, to grasp
tertiary education but may end up worse than their
disadvantaged counterparts, since they may never finish, much less finish on
schedule their educational pursuits.”
He pleaded with the Federal
Government to honour the 2009 agreement with ASUU so that students could return to the lecture
rooms and pick up the pieces of their “scattered semesters.”
An undergraduate of the Lagos State University, LASU, Joshua Oyero, agreed
that students bear the brunt of the strike more because the lecturers would
still receive their salaries during the period the action lasted.
“We suffer more intellectually. For
instance, many schools would release their examination time-tables a week after
the strike is called off. They wouldn’t care to know whether the school was
three weeks into lectures when the strike had commenced. They are only
concerned with how to start another academic calendar,” he said, adding that
the Federal Government should not kill the “education economy by their tight-fisted economic
policies”
For Head, Department of
Communication and Language Arts, University of Ibadan, UI, Nigeria, Dr. Ayobami
Ojebode, the impact of the regular strike actions embarked upon by ASUU would be most felt, not only in the quality
of graduates being churned out by the country’s public Universities, but also by the labour market and
employers of labour. Like he put it, the country has a “greedy and rabidly
impatient employment system.”
“Graduates, everywhere, are like
computers. You don’t buy a laptop today and expect that right now, it must run
your salary system for you, and compute your departmental results and do everything
you want. No computer is configured to do all of that. You must sit down and
programme it; install the right software and input data. Employers in Nigeria
have to understand that.
“When you employ a graduate, and you
expect him to speak the language of your organisation, write your memos in your
house style, or operate your fabrication machine as if that is the only one
known in the wide world, you are being unrealistic in your expectations,
impatient and greedy. Fresh graduates have to be trained – that is, you must
install your software in them and input data into them. This is investment,
also known as sowing – and the Nigerian entrepreneur wants to reap, he or she
doesn’t want to sow. Reaping where you hadn’t sown is a major Nigerian
problem,” he said.
Many analysts have argued that
considering the issues involved, the fruits of this strike would certainly not
taste sweet for any of the parties involved.
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