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Why Nigeria’s insecurity may not end soon — Ex-TUC president

A former president of the Trade Union Congress, Mr Peter Esele, has warned the Federal Government that the pervading insecurity in the country would never end unless public universities are reopened.

Esele gave the warning in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria on Thursday in Benin while commenting on the solidarity protest by the Nigeria Labour Congress.

The NLC embarked on the protest on July 26 to show solidarity with the Academic Staff Union of Universities, which had been on strike for over five months.

He pointed out that from 1999 till date, the nation’s universities had been shut cumulatively for about six years.

Esele said, “Yet, we express surprise over the current insecurity. You have millions of Nigerian youths sitting at home and doing nothing.

“More so, infrastructure in the universities are decaying because nobody is there to manage them. You have an economy around universities, right now that economy is nil.

“Workers in that environment, real estate and even parents in the universities’ environment are all at home, so why are you surprised about insecurity?

“An idle mind, they say, is the devil’s workshop.”

The academic body had been at odds with the Federal Government over the years for the apparent inability of the government to meet the terms of its agreements with the union.

According to Esele, the NLC ought to have staged the protest a long time ago to show its displeasure but “better late than never.’’

He pointed out that the current strike could hurt the upcoming general elections, advising government to take steps to resolve the issues with ASUU, to save the future of democracy in the country.

The former TUC chief noted that the latest ASUU strike could have been avoided if the Federal Government had kept faith and respected the terms of agreements reached with ASUU.

“If you ask why ASUU is on strike right now, it is because they had negotiation with the Federal Government in 2009 and there was an agreement.

“That agreement was supposed to have been implemented by the government but they didn’t implement it.

“In 2014, government paid N200 billion out of the N1.2 trillion ASUU demanded and in 2019, government paid only N20 billion.

“So when government has gone ahead not to fulfil the terms of agreements reached, what you have naturally is for ASUU to go on strike to press its demands.”

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