As OPC urges FG to end strike now, invest more in education
The National Association of Nigerian Students, NANS, Zone D, on Monday threatened to shut down major airports if the face-off between the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, and the federal government lingered.
NANS South West Zone Coordinator, Mr Adegboye Olatunji, made this known in Abuja, at a protest to All Progressives Congress, APC, national secretariat in solidarity with Governor Dapo Abiodun of OgunState to run for second term.
Olatunji said that it was time both parties came together to resolve the issues leading to the strike as students were at the receiving end.
He said: “We are planning to block government organisations that generate money for them if the ASUU issue is not resolved. We have been protesting on this issue by occupying major roads in the South West but we believe if we ground airports, the government will do something about the strike”..
He said that the NANS had dissociated itself from Abiodun’s prosecution and disqualification from contesting 2023 elections.
He said Abiodun’s education policy remained enviable in the South West region because his coming on board had helped in the resuscitation of some tertiary institutions in the state.
Similarly, Oodua People’s Congress, OPC, has expressed sadness over the prolonged strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, warning that the federal government must put an end to it.
Regretting the danger posed by the strike to education in the country, the organisation urged the government to invest heavily in the education of the youths.
This was contained in a statement issued on Monday by its president, Otunba Wasiu Afolabi.
According to Afolabi, it was also disheartening that university education had ground to a halt and students were thrown out of classes due to the prolonged lecturers’ strike, adding
“Government must make a robust investment in the education of the youth, and the immediate resolution of the lingering and long-drawn ASUU strike will be a step in the right direction”.
Meanwhile, the group has also called on President Muhammadu Buhari to tender a posthumous apology to the late former President Shehu Shagari, late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, and all Second Republic political actors charged and jailed for corruption after the December 1983 coup.
It said the exorbitant fees currently imposed on political aspirants’ nomination forms rubbished the corruption claims that Buhari had made in 1983 when he overthrew Shagari.
He said: “Who can believe that this was the same Buhari whose military tribunal sentenced people like former Bendel State’s Governor Prof. Ambrose Alli to 100 years in prison for supposedly misappropriating N983,000, and handed Kano’s former Governor BakinZuwo a 300-year jail term for having N3.4 million at home?”
General Buhari championed the coup that brought him into power on December 31, 1983, until he was himself overthrown in August 1985 by General Ibrahim Babangida.
Afolabi noted,: “Like he did in the military coup of 1983, Buhari came into office in 2015 on the mantra of fighting corruption. Now he has been defeated by corruption. The consensus leadership he recently helped to impose on the party is charging aspirants outrageous sums to contest for tickets and the president failed to call things to order.
“He owes the likes of Shagari, Awolowo, BakinZuwo, Alex Ekwueme an unreserved apology for overthrowing them. The so-called corruption of the Second Republic is nothing compared to what obtains today as evidenced in the unreasonable amount demanded for procuring parties’ nomination forms by aspirants.”
Describing as outrageous the N100 million nomination fees that Buhari’s ruling APC imposed on presidential aspirants and N50 million for governorship aspirants, OPC said it defeated the essence of regarding public service as service to the people.
“By these charges, the current generation of politicians have raised the bar of corruption. It shows that they lack plans to revamp the economy and cater to the needs of the common man.
“It shows the level of degeneracy and indecency to which we have sunk as a people. We have lost our values totally,” he added.
He blamed aspirants for not coming together to reject the outrageous fees imposed by the parties.
Similarly, it said INEC had failed in its duty to regulate budget and expenditure in the parties and thereby ensure sanity in national politics.
He said: “Nigeria is being auctioned to the highest bidder and it is sad that regulating agencies like INEC and EFCC are looking the other way.”
The PDP fees are for president N40,000,000, Governorship N21,000,000, Senate N3,500,000, House of Representatives N2,500,000 and State House of Assembly N600,000.
In APC, the fees range from: N100 million for presidential aspirants, N50 million for governorship aspirants, N20 million for senatorial aspirants, N10 million for House of Representatives aspirants and N2 million for state House of Assembly aspirants.
“It is a pity that meritocracy has been sacrificed for money as a qualification for leadership,” Afolabi lamented.
Describing as a fraud the trend whereby forms were procured by so-called well-wishers, supporters and friends for aspiring politicians, OPC said it was a way to beat the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission, ICPC, and Code of Conduct Bureau and the Declaration of Assets.
He demanded that the agencies must probe such donations.
“How do we reconcile the fact that people rush to pay N100 million in applying for a job whose four-year salary grade is only N40 million? It simply means that the applicants have the mindset of going into office to steal and perpetrate corruption. This is unacceptable,” he declared.
The organization has also demanded that the government should facilitate the release of victims of kidnapped in the Kaduna rail bombing accident as well as others in bandits and kidnappers’ captivity.