BABALAKIN:FG CAN NOT FUND UNIVERSITIES ALONE BEGS ASUU TO NEGOTIATE

Wale Babalakin
Urges ASUU to return to the negotiation table Olawale Olaleye
Following last week’s commencement of a nationwide strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) over lingering funding issues, Dr. Olawale
Babalakin, SAN, Saturday said the federal government could not afford to fund university education alone.
Babalakin stated this yesterday in Lagos during a press conference nference at his office.
The senior lawyer is the chairman of the
Implementation Monitoring Committee of the Agreements entered into between the Federal Government overnment of Nigeria and the various unions of the
Nigerian universities, namely ASUU, Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), National
Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), and Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU).
Babalakin dismissed as false the often talked about 26 per cent education funding advice by the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization rganisation (UNESCO). He said the solution to
effective education funding lied in the establishment of a students’ loan scheme and, by extension, an education bank, which will avail students of loans for
their education and other immediate needs.
He also disclosed that when they once confronted ASUU to provide document showing that UNESCO actually
pegged budgetary allocation for education by developing countries at 26 per cent, the association was
unable to substantiate its claim, a situation which further confirmed that the lie was cooked up to put
government in a difficult situation. Besides, he said such an advice would have been impossible in a developing society with unstable economy, asking what
happens in a year that the government is unable to make provision for 26 per cent due largely to the instability of the economy.
While asking the ASUU leadership to return to the negotiating table in the national interest, Babalakin said an annual budget of N2 trillion on education alone was largely unfeasible, considering other competing social needs, like health, infrastructure and security.
This makes the need to jointly work out a more plausible solution to the lingering crisis imperative.
According to Babalakin, “Our position as a team is that Nigeria deserves and should have quality education. This must not be compromised as a result of inadequate funding, which has been the situation in the last 30 years. We also believe that no Nigerian should be deprived of university education because of his/her financial circumstance. This position is consistent with that of the government of President Muhamamdu Buhari. “Going by the figures provided by ASUU, Nigeria requires over N2 trillion per annum to fund university education. This figure exceeds, in value, the total
amount of money available for all capital projects in Nigeria, including health, infrastructure, security and
others.
“No doubt, if the money was available for university education, as ASUU has insisted it is, the government will have no difficulty in spending it on university
education. However, as it is, government cannot ignore all other areas of expenditure that require funding.”
Babalakin said it was in appreciation of the financial reality that the National Council on Education “has
directed that student loan schemes be set up by the various state governments. It has also supported the
idea of an education bank, which would provide soft loans for students seeking to obtain university
education.” He said, “We do not know where ASUU got the figures
that it has been peddling around the whole country.
However, the inconsistency in the figures is glaring.
While Professor Lawan Abubakar, the ASUU zonal coordinator for Bauchi, stated in his article published
on 3rd October 2018, that our committee has proposed N500,000. 00 (Five hundred thousand naira) per annum as tuition fees to be paid by university undergraduates, the ASUU