The All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) yesterday reacted to the warning strike embarked on by Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), the Non Academic Staff Union of Educational and Assocaited Institutions (NASU) and the National Association of Academic Technologists (NATT). A statement signed by the party's National Publicity Secretary, Emma Eneukwu reads:
The All Nigeria Peoples
Party [ANPP] received with interest
the news that the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities
[SSANU],
Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions
[NASU] and
the National Association of Academic Technologists [NAAT] will commence a
7-day
warning strike today, because of the Federal Governments’ refusal to
implement
the 2009 agreements between them and Government; and
the non-inclusion of funds for the payment
of the Earned Allowances in the 2013 budget, as well as the findings of
the
report of a committee of NEEDS Assessment in the universities.
Considering that
the nation’s education sector is fast dwindling before our very eyes as a
result of lack of adequate infrastructure and qualified manpower, and
insufficient
motivation for staff, we consider it outrageous that the Federal
Government
would still dilly-dally on issues concerning this critical sector.
Recently, the Committee of
Vice Chancellors of Nigeria [CVC]
reported that Nigerians spend an average of 500 million dollars annually
on
European and American universities. We are worried that this PDP
government
seems not to care that people are losing faith in Nigerian universities,
the
breeding ground of the country’s future leaders. We are also worried
that the
government appears ignorant of the effect of this on the image of the
country
in the comity of nations. We are most worried that it is blind to the
effect
strikes, academic disruptions, and unstable school calendar have on
security
and social equilibrium of the nation.
Last week, the Senate
Committee on the Federal Capital
Territory [FCT] opposed additional N9billion expenditure on Vice
President
Namadi Sambo’s official residence which is being built. If additional
money
could be demanded for one man’s house, why can’t additional money be
added for
the upgrading of the country’s education infrastructure and the welfare
of its
staff, which affects millions of our youths and touches the fundamental
nucleus
of the nation’s development?
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