National President, ASUU, Nasir Issa-Fagge 
The
 Academic Staff Union of Universities said the existence of the National
 Universities Commission has not brought improvement to the standard of 
education in the country.
The union also said that it would not 
call off the strike because of the mere promise made by the Federal 
Government to provide revitalisation fund for the university system.
ASUU also called on the National 
Assembly to investigate the activities of NUC with a view to determining
 the continued relevance or otherwise of the university supervisory 
body.
If found irrelevant, ASUU said it should be scrapped.
Chairman of ASUU, University of Ibadan 
chapter, Dr. Olusegun Ajiboye, who spoke in Ibadan noted that the NUC 
boss, Prof. Julius Okojie, had concentrated the effort of the university
 regulatory body on quantity rather than quality while issuing 
accreditation to universities.
Ajiboye said, “Okojie should take full 
responsibility for all his deeds in the NUC. Nigerians should be proud 
of ASUU in its efforts at repositioning public universities in the 
country.”
The union leader added that the result 
of the assessment exercise of NUC carried out by the National Economic 
Empowerment Development Strategy should be used to judge the relevance 
of NUC and its leader rather than the self-assessment of  the regulatory
 agency.
He said some of the accreditations 
granted by NUC were enmeshed in controversy, wondering why the National 
Assembly had not taken action on the controversies surrounding the 
accreditations so far recorded.
He said, “One of the efforts of ASUU to 
reposition education in the country is the NEEDS Assessment document. 
This was a product of a rigorous academic exercise carried out by 
dependable and credible members of our union. Unlike the numerous faulty
 accreditation reports which had given these universities clean bill of 
health, the NEEDS Assessment Report stands out as a classical document 
of reference detailing the rot and decay in public universities in 
Nigeria.
“All well meaning Nigerians can see the 
contrast between Okojie’s packaged accreditation reports and a credible 
job done by ASUU. It has become very clear from the assessment document 
that Okojie and his people have fooled this country for too long. Time 
is now for government to beam a searchlight on the activities of the 
NUC. The education committees in both the Senate and House of 
Representatives have an arduous task to do here. Nigerians are calling 
for dismantling of an omnibus body that has done the country more harm 
than good.”
ASUU also reiterated its commitment to 
the current effort to gain Federal Government consent to its demand, 
saying that the strike would not be called off based on mere government 
promise.
Meanwhile, a non-governmental 
organisation, Do It Right Foundation, has appealed to the Federal 
Government and ASUU to work hard and resolve the lingering crisis that 
has shut down the education sector.
In a statement on Sunday, President and 
National Coordinator of the foundation, Mr. Dixon Jubril, called on  the
 university lecturers to give room for re-opening of  the universities  
in the interest of the students.
“It has become a burden on both the 
government and ASUU to save the education sector from collapse by 
finding a common ground for the amicable resolution of the crisis. What 
both parties to the dispute must have in mind is that while the 
situation lingers it is the future of the students that is at stake.
“We call on ASUU in particular to shift 
ground a bit for the common good of the education system. It’s our 
belief that the time has come for ASUU to devise other means of settling
 its disputes with government instead of the constant disruption of 
academic activities with its attendant socio-economic implications.”






 
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