GOVERNMENT, ASUU IMPASSE: NANS Gives a 14 Day Ultimatum
2 min readby our Correspondent
The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has given the Federal Government and Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) a 14-day ultimatum to resolve their differences and reopen universities for learning.
Decisions reached yesterday during an emergency virtual meeting of its leaders, said failure to reopen the schools would result in a nationwide protest that would further crumble the national economy.
A statement issued by chairman,CSalahudeen Lukman, Vice Chairman, Danladi Jonah and Modibo Adama from Federal University Yola, Adamawa State further said the continued strike by the lecturers was an “organised crime against students’ career and educational pursuits.”
The students added, “NANS declares the necessity of minimum of two academic sessions fee waiver for Nigerian students in both State and Federal institutions in the spirit of COVID-19 palliative to ameliorate the economic effects of the lockdown occasioned by the global pandemic.
“This is to avert mass drop out of students which may increase crime and criminality among youths in the country.
“The government has failed to prioritise education, hence the failure to deploy necessary fund for the complete overhaul of the education sector and total revitalisation of university education in Nigeria, through a meaningful budgetary allocation to the sector in line with the recommendation of UNESCO’s 26 per cent educational budgetary allocation, which can be traced as the root cause of incessant strike by the academic staff unions in all Nigerian tertiary institutions.”
“NANS has affirmed the perpetual and continued industrial actions by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) as the only tool to press home her demands as an organised crime against students’ career and educational pursuits.”