ASUU Raises Alarm Over Rot In NIgeria’s education Sector

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ASUU

*says 10.5 million of Nigerian children aged 5-14 not in school. 


By; BAYO AKAMO, Ibadan
The Academic Staff Union of Universities, (ASUU) on Tuesday raised alarm over what it described as

the rot in the education sector in the country, deserving urgent rescue.
ASUU at a symposium in Ibadan attended by some of the union’s past and present leaders, declared its readiness to rescue public education in Nigeria.
According to the ASUU leaders at the symposium organised by the Academic Staff Union of Universities and Civil Societies and Civil Societies Committee held at the Institution’s Faculty of Art, University of Ibadan, there is the urgent need for stakeholders to rescue the nation’s education sector.
Butresing this, the ASUU leaders said in Nigeria, despite that primary education ” is officially free and compulsory, it has been reported that 10.5 million of the country’s children aged 5-14 years are not in school”.
The ASUU leaders maintained that the union is committed to the development of education in Nigeria and ensuring that the needed recognition is accorded the education sector in the country particularly at the University level.
Comrade Olusiji Sowande in his presentation declared that the union” love our country, and the people of Nigeria” and ready to ensure that education stands as a right according to the Nigerian constitution and as such, ASUU will continue in its patriotic struggle for adequate funding of education considering the fact that Education as public good should not be  for sale
The immediate past Deputy Vice Chancellor of the University of Ibadan, Professor Ambrose Ayelari in his presentation at the symposium entitled ” The role of ASUU in the rescue of Public Education in Nigeria stated that the goals of Nigerian education are to build a free and democratic society,  a united, strong and self-reliant nation, a great and dynamic economy and a land full of opportunities for all citizens”. 
” Thus the philosophy of education is based on the development of the individual into a sound and effective citizen, the full integration of the individual into the community and the provision of equal access to educational opportunities for all citizens of the country at primary, secondary and tertiary levels”, he said.
Professor Ayelari added, ” there are 170 Universities in Nigeria comprising 79 Private, 43 Federal and State 48 as at January 2021 (NUC), and that in  the same way, there are a total of 152 Polytechnics in Nigeria comprising 37 Federal, 51 State and 64 Privately owned Polytechnics. 
” In 2021, over 600,000 candidates were found eligible for admission out of 1, 351,215 candidates that sat for the examination.The question is will the 170 Universities and 152 Polytechnics be able to absorb all the 600,000 eligible candidates?
Commenting on struggles by the union towards the growth of education in Nigeria, the former DVC recalled that  it was the agitations by ASUU that resulted into the creation of TETFUND, saying, “Education Trust (ETF) Fund now Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) was established as an intervention Agency by education Tax Act No 7 established in 1993 as amended by the Act No 40 of 1998 (now repealed and replaced with Tertiary Education Trust Fund Act 2011). . 
” It emanated from one of the struggles of ASUU in which they requested that the Fund must be instituted. Education Tax Fund is a tax chargeable on all companies registered in Nigeria at chargeable profits as a contribution to the Education Tax Fund The tax is 2% for all registered companies in Nigeria. TETFund scheme was established to disburse, manage and monitor education tax to government-owned tertiary institutions in Nigeria”.
Speaking at the symposium, the representative of the Dean of Faculty of Art, University of Ibadan emphasized that there is the need for ASUU and other stakeholders in the education sector to rescue public education in the country from bondage.

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