Opinion] Bringing The Ongoing ASUU Strike To An End; The - TopicsExpress



          

Opinion] Bringing The Ongoing ASUU Strike To An End; The Indispensable Role Of Nigerian Students Posted by: Raymond nkannebe on October 21, 2013 It is now so glaring that the lingering ASUU strike has refused for reasons one cannot comprehend, to abate. The more we cast our hopes to a lasting solution in the shortest time, the more the problem continue to deteriorate and even more saddening, the more our future continue to fritter away at the hands of those whose generation are no doubt far better than ours. Sequel to the foregoing, our gentility and civility has been tried more than enough. Despite having allowed both government and the leadership of ASUU to find a common ground and resolve the dispute between them, yet it seems its either the leadership of ASUU are bent on holding the nation to ransom using the destiny of students as a bargaining power or, that the government have sworn to deprive us of our fundamental right-Education for reasons, we cannot fathom. But are we going to allow these people, to steal into our future? Should we continue to fold our hands and watch like morons while the fools who parade themselves as our leaders continue to do injury to our today and our unknown tomorrow? Are we not already tired of being the turf on which this macabre dance between the Government and ASUU is held? What was our sin, other than that by the accident of providence we were born into this part of the world? Isn’t the future ours? Why then has the government refused to make it a better one for us? Can they compare our university days to their own? Were they not home to the best learning environment and academic condition? Why have they chosen to deny us of having just a little of what they had in their own days? Is it not a case of sheer wickedness? But in all of it, what have we done? Have we shown any commitment on our part? We call ourselves “Great Nigerian Students”. Do we even know what greatness is about? If we do, how have we shown by our actions that indeed we are great? True some of us have tried in one way or the other to show that we are pained and short changed, but many of us have thrown in the towel and have allowed despots to lay claims to the most important tool of our civilization-Education and we have unconsciously done so, by our inactions and omissions. Having said that, are we also going to allow them to get away with this latest crime? No, we must do something. We must rise and allow these scales to be sequestered from our eyes. If a spell has been cast on us, we must stand up and denounce whoever may have been responsible for that. What happened to the revered spirit of ALUTA? Where is our umbrella body NANS? Where are our diverse student union leaders in the various state and federal campuses? Perhaps they have gone cold like black coals in the harmattan. What happened to their voices? And for the few who have been able to come out clean with their voices, how have we helped them to shout even louder? These are serious questions begging for serious answers. If the strike has lingered this far, I am beginning to believe that it is because we have allowed it to. Why and how You may ask? – By our inactions and refusal to stand up and reclaim what is ours. Only a week ago, a student was deported in France; those of us who followed the story know what became of the entire nation. The students in their numbers almost brought that country to a halt and drew the attention of the world. That is what students are renowned for. Little Yousafzei Malala, the Pakistani girl, fought for the right of the girl child to education in Pakistan. All we do is read about them and block our head to learn a thing or two from their bravery or even repeat the feat here. No. we so much love our lives. We fear the men in uniform more than we fear God. We are more interested in things so mundane and have in that process lost everything we stand for and have been taken for toothless baboons. We sulk I must say and I am sorry to say that. Shall we allow this madness to continue? It seems many of us still don’t know that in the current world, it is only in Nigeria that students will be shut out of schools for four whopping months and that society or that nation continues to work. It’s leaders continue to live as though, fortune has rather smiled on the nation. It is only here in Nigeria that we talk but always lacking in the will to walk our talk. The little time when our spirit is willing, our love for the flesh makes our body weak like people who have just ran a marathon. If we continue in this way, our future will be the darkest in the history of this nation. But no, we must do something. What then? I enjoin each and every one of us to join the ASUU PROTESTS across the social media especially on face book and on twitter. Many of us are available on that space and for those who aren’t, we can always tell them verbally. We need to gather all the momentum we need across this medium before we go out to the streets and be heard. We have remained silent for too long enough that I wouldn’t blame anyone who takes our silence for stupidity. Our population is monstrous. Our target is a one million student’s march on a date to be communicated the moment our numbers reach our estimated height. Our vehicle is the Social Media. It is a tool with which we can utilize to change our society; little wonder many have said that it may yet change Africa. True we lack access to the old media moreover; our target audience is barely represented there. We shall be assigning leaders across all the states of the federation to direct the forthcoming National March. We are not out to disrupt the public peace or do violence to anybody or organization. On the contrary, we just want to be heard loud and clear saying and chanting, “ENOUGH IS ENOUGH”. This is not the time to give in to fears and despondency. We are on a struggle to re-claim and restore our relevance and also be factored into the equation of this comatose of a nation. I am ready to do it; I am ready to put my life on the line for this cause. I am ready to take that bullet but the greater question is: when I am gone, will you have the nerve and the onions to pick up from where we have stopped and continue with the struggle? That is the biggest question. There is no struggle without tears and that feeling of giving up, so ours will not and cannot be an exception but winners are those who never allow themselves to be drowned by their inner voices. We must not be trapped by any dogma. The official twitter handle is @Asuuprotests and the hash tag is ₦ASUUPROTESTS. Let us get on the train and from there organize ourselves and chart out our winning formation. There is no gain saying the fact that our National or umbrella body-NANS have sold their mandate and have eaten the biblical Esau porridge but we must let them know that it is our interest they represent and their mandate comes from our individual votes and when they cease to be our representatives for parochial gains, we must show them that it is in our hands that their legitimacy lies and not some sort of natural, imprescriptible or inalienable rights conferred on them by Nature. Our target and goal is to re-claim back our education from those who are bent of taking it away from us in the brightness of the sun. If we were once blind, we are no longer blind. And if we are no longer blind, then we must act like a people who still have the pristine advantage of their eyes. Join me as we take on this struggle and how great is our distress and the burden that lies ahead of us, until it is over. Consider Your Students; Return To Classrooms, Jonathan Appeals To ASUU Posted by: niyi on October 19, 2013 asuu President Goodluck Jonathan has appealed to members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to return to the classrooms in the interest of their students. Jonathan made the appeal, Saturday in Ado-Ekiti, at the inauguration of the three-storey College of Engineering Complex at the Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Ekiti State, which was named after the President. The president urged ASUU members to heed his appeal saying that whatever their grievances might be, keeping students out of school for four months was unpatriotic. “I once again appeal to the entire membership of ASUU to pause and ponder on the adverse effect of their action on the future of the vibrant youths of this great nation. “The collective destiny of tens of thousands of tomorrow’s leaders should not be held hostage to vagaries of labour disputes. “As long as we are humans, as long as we are a developing society, this labour dispute must come up. “I always say that even in the developed societies we hear about labour dispute; and there is no society, even the most developed, that has provided the facilities for every worker. “Our security services, the Police, the Armed Forces, Navy, Air Force and para-military, intelligent services are also operating in an environment that is not the best. “If all of us should go on long strike because our environment is not at its optimum, then definitely we can never get the Nigeria of our dream. “So, let me use this unique opportunity that I am interfacing with our future leaders, our students, to plead with ASUU members. “If it is a genuine strike keeping students out of classrooms for almost four months, by that they have demonstrated to everybody that they have a case. “And if the strike is motivated by some other interests, they have also achieved that by keeping students out of schools for more than a semester,” he said. The President emphasised that the freedom of association and the right of workers to go on strike should not be abused to harm the country’s interest. “I believe that labour has the right to go on strike, but in that strike, any action taken must be built on patriotic zeal. “In as much as you can go on strike, you must be patriotic to our country. “No matter how and what you feel about Mr president and the federal government, I plead with ASUU that for the sake of our students, they should resume classes,” he said. Jonathan however assured all that the government would continue to work with all Nigerians to build a better country for all and future generation. He noted that as long government had shown commitment to improving the qualities of infrastructure in the universities and the operating environment, ASUU should reconsider its stand. Jonathan noted that if students of private universities could get their degrees within three and half years as witnessed in ABUAD, “it is unacceptable that students of public institutions are kept for extra one or two years”. Nkannebe Raymond is a writer and a Law student in the University of Maiduguri. He shares some of his thoughts on twitter via @yung_silky
Posted on: Tue, 22 Oct 2013 10:54:11 +0000

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