The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) yesterday,
protested in Ado Ekiti, Ekiti State capital, and threatened to shut down
activities in the private universities in the country if the Federal
Government failed to comply with the demands of the Academic Staff Union
of Universities (ASUU) and the strike lingered.
The students who
displayed several placards with various inscriptions, lambasted the
Federal Government for its failure to honour the agreement it entered
into with ASUU since 2009.
Speaking on behalf of his colleagues,
Asafon Sunday, Director of Action and Mobilisation NANS, South–West,
claimed between 2000 and 2011 the Nigerian government earned about
N48.48 trillion from the sale of oil alone, against N3.10 trillion
earned between 1979 and 1999
He said the Federal Inland Revenue
Service, FIRS, in 2012 financial year alone generated N5.12 trillion
from tax paid by the masses.
According to him: “With this
tremendous upswing in the revenue at the disposal of the Nigerian
government, one would have expected such to translate to commensurate
improvement in the quality of Nigeria’s public education as well as
other social services.”
He condemned the refusal of Federal
Government to budget a reasonable amount of money to education sector as
recommended by UNESCO which is 26 per cent of the country’s total
budget.
Sunday noted that some countries with smaller Gross
Domestic Product, GDP, like Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, Kenya, Morocco and
Botswana had budgetary allocations to education sector as follow, 31 per
cent,20 per cent,23 per cent ,17.7 per cent and 19 per cent
respectively to 8.5 per cent that Nigeria government had budgeted for
education in 2013.
Also speaking, Steven Adara ,a student leader
from Ekiti State University, EKSU , lamented that government officials
and prominent Nigerians were not bothered about the crisis in the public
universities because their children were in private schools overseas.
According
to him: “We will mobilise and disrupt academic activities in the
private universities because it is the sons and daughters of the rich
that are in these schools.”

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