[NEWS] ASUU bemoans 4 % reduction in 2017 budget allocation to education
The President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities
(ASUU), Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, has bemoaned the four per cent reduction in the
2017 budget allocation to education sector.
He made the observation on Thursday in Abuja when he paid a
courtesy call on the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Mr Ayuba
Wabba.
He said such reduction was capable of destroying the nation’s
educational system. According to him, the decline in funding education from 11
per cent to eight per cent in 2015 will do the education system no good.
“About six per cent was proposed in 2017; about four per cent
was given at the end of the day.
“The decline will also destroy the country because destroying
the educational system of a nation means destroying the nation,’’ he said.
He said education had been relegated to the background
because political office holders, now own private universities at the detriment
of government universities.
“They build their own universities, and they do not care
about government universities.
“The moment they destroyed government universities, Nigeria
will have none again, because everything has been privatised,” he said.
According to him, the union has always engaged government on
funding and provision of facilities to attract quality education that can bring
development to the country.
He said the political class hardly recognised the essence of
scholarship and funding for the development of the system, adding that all they
think about was for them to take away what belong to the people.
Ogunyemi also called on Nigerians and Nigeria Labour Congress
(NLC) to support the fight for proper funding of education sector. He, however,
commended the assistance and intervention of the NLC during the six months
strike.
While receiving the ASUU president, the NLC president said
education has played a major role in the development of the nation’s economy.
He said it was sad that most of the leaders, who had
benefited from free education, could not transfer same education to the
children of the poor.
According to him, large number of Nigerian youths has been
denied quality education.
According to him, this act is deliberate to push the children
of the poor out of the growth of the nation’s economy, so that they can
determine who runs the affairs of the nation.
Wabba, however, urged the union
to see that the battle was won, adding that the nation has more than enough
policy and resources to make the education system better than what it used to
be.
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