Dairy of a Nigerian Student was written by one of our readers; Nworgu Uchenna.
Lazily rising from my sleep with strained eyes and a big sigh, numbness rapidly disappearing from my fingers and toes, I roll over and curl up more tightly, hugging my knees between my arms. Its yet another new day. I am a young lad but my fears and worries are that of a Christmas goat awaiting slaughter.
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My school identity card says 2009-2013
but I know that with the way things are going I may not graduate till
well into 2015. That is if I am not dead by then, blown away by a bomb,
shot down by the police or even beaten to death by a violent legislator.
I sound very pessimistic and gloomy, it's not my fault. The situation
at hand has killed my enthusiasm and that of millions of students of
government-owned tertiary institutions.
News of an impending strike started
trickling into our ears around late June and we shrugged it off as one
of those things, 'normal ASUU wahala' which would be resolved in no
time. Alas, our joy was shortlived in the first week of July when a
communiqué was issued confirming the strike action. Students living in
far places were confronted with the sad fact that they may yet again
have to risk their lives to return home as this strike was actually
happening.
Thank God for my Industrial Training,
Facebook, and of course Twitter, I won't have to end up idle or exposed
to extrajudicial killing. As ironic as this may sound, the combination
of some of these 3 facilities, if not more has being responsible for
maintaining the sanity of millions of Nigerian students sitting down at
home idle and frustrated. So many students are spending virtually this
period of strike "facebooking" and tweeting, chatting, visiting friends
and just doing anything to kill the boredom.
When two elephants fight, what shall
become of the grass? Question for the gods, maybe. No one knows when
ASUU will be calling off the strike. How I wish the government and ASUU
sheath their swords and pity our plights. How I wish the government pays
more attention to funding of universities and investment in human
resources.
How I wish ASUU compromises a bit and
comes down to reasonable agrrement. All we here everyday is meeting upon
meeting, negotiations. To make matters worse, ASUU seems to have pulled
out of negotiations and the government itself is concentrating fully on
political brouhaha, domestic violence, and Boko Haram issue in no
particular order. Well I will not digress into the details of it all,
after all what do I know?
All I know is that when I resume back to
school (only God knows whenever that is) *sad face*, austerity measures
might have to take its place in favour of my usual philanthropic nature.
Economic meltdown has taken a rather harsh toll on my dad's finance
consequently affecting my own meagre share; it means no more generosity
with my belongings.
We are been told ubiquitously to pray.
"Pray for your family. Pray for your country. Pray for the whole world." So we are praying or at least I have being praying. Even with my deep pessimism and sarcasm, there's still one tiny voice in my head telling me that things will work out fine. I have survived worse. But for now its back to tweeting, chatting and hustling, at least these ones have not decided to strike yet.
"Pray for your family. Pray for your country. Pray for the whole world." So we are praying or at least I have being praying. Even with my deep pessimism and sarcasm, there's still one tiny voice in my head telling me that things will work out fine. I have survived worse. But for now its back to tweeting, chatting and hustling, at least these ones have not decided to strike yet.
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