Poly Students Give FG 2-Week Ultimatum to Resolve Issues with ASUP:
Polytechnic students across the country on Thursday, staged a
peaceful protest, and gave the Federal Government a two week ultimatum
to resolve all issues with the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics
(ASUP) or face the wrath of Nigerian students.
The students, who blocked some major streets in Kaduna in protest of
the lingering strike embarked upon by ASUP, also demanded for the
immediate resignation of the Supervising Minister of Education, Nyemson
Wike, for failing to resolve contending issues with the lecturers and
also vowed not to support President Goodluck Jonathan’s re-election in
2015.
The protest forced motorists and pedestrians to be stranded at the ever busy Muhammadu Buhari Way in the state capital.
The protest which started at about 10AM caused a traffic jam on the
road leading to the Muhammadu Buhari Way, as the students barricaded the
way.
Marching slowly with placards of various inscriptions and chanting
anti-government songs, the students moved down to the secretariat of the
Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Kaduna State chapter, located along
the same road, where they addressed journalists.
The students also lamented the alleged insensitivity of the Federal
Government to their plight and the wasting of public funds on
meaningless ventures that have no positive impact to national
development.
They also noted that they would be left with no choice than to storm
the nation’s capital, Abuja, to disrupt the ongoing national
conference if the federal government does not implement all agreements
it reached with the polytechnic lecturers since 2009.
Other demands by the aggrieved students include the review of
discrimination policy between polytechnic and university graduates,
source of N20 Billion required by ASUP and immediate conversion of the
National Board for Technical Education to National Polytechnic
Commission.
The students noted that the protest was a warning to the Federal
Government for unleashing hardship on them and cautioned that if ASUP
and the Federal Government fail to reach a compromise that could lead to
the reopening of the Polytechnics, they would have no other
alternative than to embark on a nation-wide protest.
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