Two
hundred and sixteen Nigerians at home and in the Diaspora have signed
an online petition asking the Federal Government and the Academic Staff
Union of Universities to end the industrial dispute which has kept
public universities shut for four months.
The petition launched on change.org,
a go-to site for web protests, is asking President Goodluck Jonathan
and the National President of ASUU, Dr. Nassir Faggae, to reach an
“amicable consensus.”
In the petition entitled, “Mr. President
and the Academic Staff Union of Universities: Please End the ASUU
Strike now,” the petitioners said the Presidency should stop playing
politics with education of the Nigerian youth.
Continue after the break.
The petition read in part, “Since the
ASUU strike began, it has been over half a semester, a lot in the life
of students waiting at home, not knowing when the strike will be over.
The future of Nigeria is at stake. Stop playing politics with education.
“It is urgent we send a message that it is long past time for the FG and ASUU to reach consensus and get students back to school by ending this strike.”
A majority of non-students who appended
their signature to the petition noted that they joined the online
protest with a view to crying out to ASUU and the FG to consider poor
students whose parents cannot afford the luxury of sending them overseas
to study like the sons and daughters of political office holders.
Former Vice-President, Atiku Abubakar,
joined other students and concerned Nigerians clamouring for a speedy
end to the crisis rocking the higher education sector.
Atiku, who featured the link to the
petition signing website on his Twitter handle, wrote, “We should never
play politics with education. Our future depends on it. It is time for
the FG and ASUU to reach a consensus and get students back to school by
ending this strike.”
An Abuja-based post-graduate student in
one of the public universities in the country, Mubarak Jubrin,
expressing his dissatisfaction, wrote: “I am stuck with a semester to
finish my Master’s programme. The FG should be doing everything possible
to rescue the one institution left that is working towards producing
better human beings who will shape the future of our dear country.”
Noting that prolonged shutting down of
public universities is a dangerous omen for the society and development
of the nation, a Kaduna-based student, Tarik Abubakar, also said
Nigerians students were being denied their rights to education.
“Students in other countries are
enjoying their rights to education. I am pleading with the FG and ASUU
to settle their issue and call off the strike,” Abubakar stated.
A Nigerian student studying at the
University of Cape Town, South Africa, Godspower Onwudiwe, lamented that
the industrial action paints a bad picture of Nigeria on the
international scene.
Onwudiwe stated, I feel so sorry for my
beloved country because these incessant strikes are a barrier to her
general development. Also, as a student in the Diaspora, it paints a
very pitiful and shameful picture on our international identity.
“I cannot wait to not only see this
strike end but also the end of future strikes to the detriment of the
future of this generation and our country at large.”
Jemima Gana, who was moved to sign the
petition because she believes that the status quo needs to change as the
prosperous future of Nigeria depends on quality education, which is
being threatened by the strike.
Gana, who according to the information
she provided on the site, is based in Lagos, said Nigerian students need
a stable learning environment devoid of strikes for them to be able to
compete globally.
“It is so important to me because it is
high time the FG took the value of education seriously and in high
regard. Students in Nigeria need a stable environment to acquire
knowledge and graduate on time in order to contribute their skills to
the growth and development of this great nation,” she wrote.
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