Lagos Teachers call off Strike – back to square 1, Naira now 190 to a dollar!
Credit crunch, Critique, Economy, Education, Lagos, Life, Nigeria, Politics, Social, Uncategorized, jobs Add commentsFellow Lagosians,
Lagos Teachers make or break?
It is with a heavy heart that I write this piece. My hands are shaking and numb but write I must. As Kwara celebrated the strike suspension (http://allafrica.com/stories/200903060223.html) on Thursday, 5th of March 2009, National Union of Teachers NUT, Ilupeju, Lagos were engaged in showdown talks with Lagos only to finalise on Friday that teachers would have to resume work and the impromptu holiday had to come to an end (http://www.234next.com/csp/cms/sites/Next/Home/5390974-146/Lagos_teachers_call_off_strike_.csp). Kwara got what they asked for and negotiation with the Government was fruitful, but in Lagos, Africa’s “most populous” city, the teachers were threatened.
Not a death threat though, not blackmail for treason, nope. Now listen to the diplomatic, political threat:
“In order to give you what you have demanded from us, we MUST downsize and sack many of you!”
Osenobua! The statement, just a sentence can be translated into different versions, King James Version inclusive. Elizabethan would look somehow like:
“Thou shalt surely lose thy source of livelihood if it pleaseth thee in thine heart that thy neighbour shalt add more to his herd!”
and Hebrew, and NIV, and CEV, and Arabic… No matter which version, the point is clearer in the hip hop version:
“We just have to rob Peter to pay Paul so we can give Paul’s money to Caesar!”.
The teachers only asked for a 27.5% increase in the face of inflation, credit crunch and devaluation of our currency, the naira, and have now been forced not to call off but to “suspend” the strike and return to work. The students are bound to suffer some setback anyway.
Now my take on this. I think the NUT should allow the Government sack as many teachers as they can. I’ve been to public schools, teachers are just not enough. The government will be forced to employ more teachers with time as it becomes very obvious that the current number of teachers are not enough to help the ever growing influx of pupils into public schools. Also, people are bound to retire yearly, thereby freeing up more employment slots.
If teachers continue to teach without their hearts in their craft, we are bound to produce the worst generation of students ever, and that won’t be nice for the streets. The ones who will eventually suffer for this historic, cruel act will be you and me who ply the streets of Lagos everyday.
Ps: Dollar – Naira, Black market/ Street price at $1 to 190 naira.










March 16th, 2009 at 1:57 pm
hmm…very well written sir!
where does “power of negotiation” & “the right right of the individual” come into play in all this?
cant blame the teachers for going back but it still annoys me that they cant stand up for their rights and stick by it. if the teachers allow themselves to be bullied like this, no wonder Nigeria is breeding generation after generation of conformists!
how can things EVER change if we keep going on like this?
March 26th, 2009 at 3:43 pm
As I browsed through a tones of sites, I feel I should even internet market my site. I’m basically a computer graphics person, but I sometimes feel that it will be time consuming, but what’s also the harm in doing it.
April 25th, 2010 at 1:04 pm
thanks ;P very helpful post!