Showing posts with label Federal Government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Federal Government. Show all posts

29 November 2013

WHICH IS WORSE?...ASUU'S 5-MONTH OLD STRIKE OR JONATHAN'S MILITARY ORDERS?...WILL ASUU SEEK RESTRAINING ORDER FROM COURT?...WHAT IF NLC COMPOUNDS THE MATTER?

Govt orders varsity teachers to resume work before Dec. 




ima

• Directs VCs to sack, advertise vacancies
• ASUU says threat may prolong strike

FUMING at the failure of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to call off its strike, the Federal Government yesterday directed the immediate reopening of all its universities.
  It also directed that the position of any teacher who does not resume by December 4, 2013 should be declared vacant and advertised.
  The Supervising Minister of Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, made the position of the government known while briefing journalists yesterday in Abuja.
  But the ASUU yesterday dared the Federal Government, insisting that the strike was a legal action. It warned that the threat would only make the strike to linger.
  Wike said: “All vice-chancellors of the federal universities that are currently on strike should immediately reopen for academic and allied activities as directed by pro-chancellors.
  “Any academic member of staff who fails to resume on or before December 4, 2013 automatically ceases to be an employee of the institution.
  “Vice-chancellors should ensure that members of staff who resume for work are provided with the enabling environment for academic and allied activities.”     
  The minister also directed the National Universities Commission (NUC) to monitor the compliance of the directives by the various institutions.
  He revealed that as a responsible government, “we cannot allow the continuous closure of our public universities for this length of time (five months), as this poses a danger to the educational system, the future of our youths and national development.”
   Wike noted that the Federal Government had met all its commitments and obligations with respect to the FG/ASUU 2009 Agreement.
  “The Federal Government initiated a series of meetings between her team led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), including the Ministers of Education, Finance, and Labour and Productivity, and other top government officials with the executive of ASUU. It should be noted that a joint Senate and House Committee on Education also intervened without success. A committee was also inaugurated for the implementation of the Needs Assessment Report.
   “As a further demonstration of government’s commitment to resolving the crisis, His Excellency, Namadi Sambo, GCON, Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria on behalf of the Federal Government, intervened and invited ASUU to the meeting where the two contentious issues of Earned Allowances and Funding, for the revitalisation of the universities, were discussed and resolutions reached. There was still no positive response for ASUU.
  “Consequently, on November 4, 2013, in a 13-hour meeting, His Excellency, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR, met with ASUU executive, Labour union leaders from the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC), where all the issues were resolved and firm commitments were made to address the lingering issues.”      

He noted that the President’s gestures were enough to guarantee the commitment of government to addressing all issues as resolved at the meetings.
  “At the end of the meeting with the President, the ASUU executive promised to meet with its NEC to present all the resolutions reached and report back by Friday, November 8, 2013. It is unfortunate that while travelling to attend the NEC meeting in Kano, we lost a key member and former President of the union, Prof. Festus Iyayi. Government sympathises with the family of the late Iyayi and ASUU.”
   He, however, revealed that three weeks after the meeting with the President, ASUU responded by giving new conditions for suspending the strike.
  He hinted that government had reviewed the situation and come to the conclusion that the continuation of the strike was an attempt by ASUU to sabotage all efforts to address the issues.
  But ASUU said the threat further buttressed its earlier claim that the Federal Government was not committed to implementing any resolutions it reached with the union.
  In his reaction, the National Treasurer of ASUU, Dr. Ademola Aremu, said the Federal Government was wasting the time of Nigerians and youths in the country by failing to perfect the resolutions and get the strike suspended.
  The union said it had reasons to be wary following the failure of government to honour its promises to polytechnic teachers, resident doctors, and health workers who have suspended their strikes.
  ASUU added that the threat was an insult to the sensibilities of Nigerians who were waiting for the Federal Government for positive reaction.
  “With the latest action, the Federal Government has shown that it is not committed to its word. We are saying that since we agreed at the meeting that the sum of N200 billion is for 2012 and 2013 revitalisation, the Federal Government should deposit same in the Central Bank of Nigeria. We are already in November and December is around the corner. If they don’t do that now, when do they want to do it? We are saying the non-victimisation clause should be included as agreed while the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement should be included as agreed with the President.
  “It is a pity if the Federal Government is not willing to perfect the resolutions reached with the union. This is why we find it difficult to trust our leaders by their words. How can someone be threatening to sack lecturers when universities are already short-staffed by almost 60,000? We are not in a military era.   The military tried it and failed. This one will fail again. Government can reopen the schools. ASUU did not shut down the universities. It was the school management that ordered the students to go back home.”
   Aremu berated Wike, saying it was a shame that the Federal Government would wait for four months to take any step and scuttle the strike through military orders.
  “We are saying the government should show commitment to the resolutions. It should address the issues before it: we are not demanding any extra kobo. This is another long path to make the strike linger more than necessary.”
  Meanwhile, Ekiti students in tertiary institutions who were tired of the strike yesterday took their case to God.
  They held a prayer session and sought divine intervention in the impasse. The session, held at Lady Jibowu Hall, Ekiti Government House, had in attendance the Deputy Governor, Prof. Modupe Adelabu and some clerics.
  In her remarks, the deputy governor noted that the students did the right thing by taking their petition to God. She described as unfortunate that both parties to the dispute – ASUU and the Federal Government – remained adamant despite interventions from well-meaning Nigerians.


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21 November 2013

WHY ARE "EDUCATED PEOPLE" THE WORST ENEMIES OF EDUCATION IN NIGERIA?...WHY MUST ASUU CONTINUE TO BE EDUCATION POLICE TO ARREST THEIR ATTENTION?




[caption id="attachment_21056" align="alignleft" width="135"]WHY ARE "EDUCATED PEOPLE" THE GREATEST ENEMIES OF EDUCATION IN NIGERIA?...WHY MUST ASUU CONTINUE TO BE EDUCATION POLICE TO ARREST THEIR ATTENTION? asuu_logo[/caption]

After ASUU …





THERE is a paradox governments have  built around education — they are spending billions of Naira on education, yet the financial issues around education are not being resolved. The Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, strike is only one of many matters that are dogging education.

Government’s supposed interests in negotiating with ASUU, the speed being applied, and the uttermost neglect of other aspects of education confirm the diminishing importance that governments attach to education.

ASUU’s case is exceptional, in that governments appeared concerned. When the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics, ASUP, went on strike, it took almost three months before governments started talking to the union. The issue remains partially resolved.

With the ASUU strike, the failure of governments and their programmes are obvious. Governments sign agreements they do not intend to keep. ASUU is on strike over a 2009 agreement. Governments want to re-negotiate implementation of a four-year-old agreement.

They also know that the negotiations for a new agreement are due. We have governments that plan for immediate needs, if they ever do. They are exhausting themselves over ASUU strike as if meeting ASUU’s demands would resolve the challenges that our education faces, among them irrelevant curricula.

How do governments spend billions of Naira they budget annually for education? Bureaucracy consumes the bulk of the money. Duplication of agencies that manage education is the biggest cost centre in our national education management. Governments are running up new costs.

New higher institutions are being built with emphases on physical structures. Laboratories, libraries and research centres that they require to be centres for meaningful academic engagements are available in inadequate numbers.

It is absurd that governments — the owners of the universities — would need an ASUU strike to determine the status of the facilities in universities.

What plans do governments have for education? How would they tackle sustainable funding so that we are not soon back to another wave of strikes in a matter of months?  Would governments ever consider education important enough that it should run without disruptions from strike?

There would be no easy solutions. Many of the federal agencies on education just drain resources that should have been invested in improving learning facilities. States imitate the federal waste, making education one of governments’ biggest cost centres, without commensurate value for the expenditures.

Governments can save costs by eliminating duplication in the functions of education agencies. There should be clearer lines about the roles of governments at different levels of education. The Federal Government should not be dabbling into primary school education.

Finally, the future of education is too important to be left to haphazard funding. Governments should provide resources for education beyond ASUU’s demands.

VANGUARD EDITORIAL



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11 April 2013

REPORT ABOUT SCRAPPING OF NECO AND JAMB MADE NO SENSE FROM THE MINUTE IT WAS PUBLISHED




[caption id="attachment_7914" align="alignleft" width="200"]REPORT ABOUT SCRAPPING OF NECO AND JAMB MADE NO SENSE FROM THE MINUTE IT WAS PUBLISHED Chief Nyesom Wike- Minister of State for Education[/caption]



FG reassures on UTME, NECO

LAGOS — INDICATIONS emerged, yesterday, that the Federal Government may have soft-pedaled on the scrapping of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, examination, UTME; and the National Examinations Council, NECO, as recommended by the Mr. Steve Oransoye-led committee, which had generated mixed reactions.

This came as apprehension gripped over 2,000 workers of JAMB, who may lose their jobs if the recommendations by the committee on the restructuring of the Federal Government agencies and parastatals are implemented

In Ado Ekiti, yesterday, Senior Special Assistant, SSA, to President Goodluck Jonathan on Youth and Student Matters, Jude Imagwe, said Federal Government was not considering scrapping UTME and NECO.

The SSA, who spoke at Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, during a workshop on teaching/learning method, said the bodies were set up by laws for specific purposes.

Imagwe noted that the recommendations of the Oronsanye committee may not be unconnected with the fact that a lot of government agencies were performing similar roles and functions, saying “at the end of the day, we will keep our own. NECO will be strengthened.”

Meanwhile, organised labour in JAMB, Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions, NASU, and Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria, ASCSN, have vowed to challenge the report in court should the Federal Government implement it.

In an address by Mr. Samuel Azaba and Mr. Isaiah Adeigbe, branch Chairmen of NASU and ASCSN, respectively, and Mr. Stephen Ignatius, NASU Secretary and his counterpart from ASCSN, Mr. Adederin Adegoke, the unions said instead of scrapping the institutions, government should establish more to accommodate the about 1.7 million students seeking admission in about 400 institutions in the country.

By Gbenga Ariyibi & Johnbosco Agbakwuru/VANGUARD

OUR OPINION POSTED ON VANGUARD ONLINE

..some of us  never believed for even one moment that NECO and JAMB would be scrapped...to be replaced with what?...another NECO and JAMB with new names?...stop writing unapologetic headlines...you messed up from the first day you reported they were going to be scrapped...this is not to say that NECO and JAMB should not be reviewed.