OPINION: Who Will Save Kwara COE Lecturers from Saraki's Deadly Grip? By Farooq A. Kperogi

Date: 2015-10-24

Senate President Bukola Saraki is called Kwara State's "Governor- General" for a reason: He is, for all practical purposes, the state's de facto governor, and Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed is merely his impotent, obsequious caretaker. Ahmed must dutifully take orders from Saraki or risk losing his cushy surrogate governorship. This isn't a flippant, ill-natured putdown of Governor Ahmed, who seems like a nice person; it's an uncomfortable truth that many Kwarans know only too well.

So when I ask who will save lecturers in Kwara State's colleges of education from death and starvation because they haven't been paid salaries for six or seven months now, I am not barking up the wrong tree. Saraki is the main character in the movie of Kwara politics. Nothing happens there without his imprimatur.

Lecturers in the state's three colleges of education located in Ilorin, Oro, and Lafiagi - including the College of Arabic and Islamic Legal Studies in llorin - are being owed salaries, which has caused at least 13 of them to die as of the time of writing this column. This, dear reader, is unconscionable, officially sanctioned mass murder, and Saraki can stop it if he so desires.

This issue is personal to me on many levels. As regular readers of this column know, I am from Kwara State - from the Baatonu-speaking part of the state called Baruten. So this isn't an abstract subject-matter for me. Several of my former secondary school teachers, friends, and former high school classmates, with whom I am in regular contact, are lecturers at Kwara State's colleges of education. I am intimately familiar with the heartrendingly excruciating existential torments they are undergoing as a result of the non-payment of their salaries. A lot of them are literally on the edge of existence; they can't feed their families, pay their children's school fees, or even pay their rents. After more than half a year in this state, their agony has reached dizzyingly crushing heights.

When entreaties to traditional rulers and leaders of thought in the state to prevail on Senator Saraki and his caretaker governor to pay salaries owed to them haven't yielded any results, the lecturers resolved to embark on a strike from October 16. But instead of addressing the lecturers' grievances, the state government's information managers have been busy unleashing deliberate, sustained but pathetically unimaginative propaganda in the mass media against the lecturers. The government first claimed that no state government employee was being owed any backlog of unpaid salaries. When this nakedly insensitive lie was laid bare to the world, the government changed its story several times, and now insists that colleges of education must pay their lecturers from internally generated revenues.

It is worth noting that since 2011 until about seven months ago when the government stopped paying salaries outright, lecturers in Kwara State's tertiary institutions were paid only 70 percent of their salaries. No one knows what has happened to the other 30 percent.

As I write this, there is intense turmoil in Kwara State's colleges of education. A younger brother of mine who was supposed to start the last year of his studies this week at one of the state's colleges of education lamented to me that his lecturers had started a strike and that his graduation was in danger of being derailed indefinitely. But why should the lecturers not strike? Why should they teach others when they can't send their own kids to school? Why should they teach when they can't eat? Why should they teach when the callousness of a duplicitous state government has caused them to vegetate in agonizing misery for months on end?

When Muslim worshipers stoned Senator Bukola Saraki at the Eid praying ground in Ilorin in September this year amid shrill screams of "Ole!" (Yoruba for "thief!"), they weren't taking sides in the Code of Conduct Bureau's politically motivated trial of Saraki; they were spontaneously ventilating pent-up rage against what they rightly perceived as Saraki's suffocating stranglehold on the state, which ensured that the state's civil servants were owed backlogs of salaries. It was anger touched off by hunger. (I am told that regular civil servants, who couldn't buy rams for the Eid-ul kabir festivities, have now been paid their salaries after the stoning of Saraki).  But the state's college of education lecturers are still left in the lurch.

Unfortunately, except for Daily Trust's October 10, 2015 report on the issue titled "Kwara gov't, tertiary institutions' staff lock horns over salary arrears," the traditional media in Nigeria seem to have blacked out the plight of Kwara State's college of education lecturers.

But the dire existential predicaments of these lecturers are too scandalizing to ignore. "Some of us even lost our children. Some of our members' children couldn't write WAEC because of this. Many of us also live in darkness because we couldn't pay our electricity bills and we have become objects of mockery before our landlords because we could not pay our rents. It is devastating," AbdulKareem Amuda-Kannike, a college of education worker, told Daily Trust.

How can you not be touched by this? The state government received millions of naira from the federal government as bail-out funds, ostensibly to pay the backlog of salaries owed to workers. Where did the money go?

Most importantly, who will save starving, defenseless lecturers from the double-dyed villainy of a rapacious, conscienceless, power-mongering cabal led by Bukola Saraki and his servile crony, Abdulfatah Ahmed?

 People of conscience in Kwara State and beyond should quickly intervene to halt the scarcely visible, barely known, but nonetheless vicious official mass murder of lowly, voiceless lecturers in the state's colleges of education.


Source

 

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Kwasu     Lateef Ademola Olatunji     Fatima Abolore Jimoh     N-Power     REO CAKES     Balogun-Ojomu     Isiaka AbdulRazaq     Abdulmumin Yinka Ajia     Hussein Oloyede     IHS Towers     Shettima     Facebook     Mary Arinde     Garba Ayodele Wahab     Afolabi-Oshatimehin     Yaman     Kemi Adeosun     Ben Duntoye     Ijagbo     Abdulganiy Abimbola Abdussalam     Issa Oloruntogun     Yusuf Lawal     Tunji Olawuyi     Saka Aleshinloye     Code Of Conduct     National Information Technology Development Agency     Bola Magaji     Timothy Akangbe     Ibrahim Mohammed     Femi Ogunsola     Offa Descendants Union     Twitter     Oba Abu     Issa Baba     NYSC     JSSCE     Hijaab     Kunle Suleiman     Basic Education Certificate Examination     Islamic Development Bank     Damilola Yusuf Adelodun     Pakata     Kayode Laro     Lai Mohammed     Ojuekun     IF-K     BECE     Kwara Metro Park     Doyin Group     Abdulrazaq Akorede     LABTOP     Makama     Kwara Teaching Service Commission     Ambassador Kayode Laro     Hikmah AbdulKareem     Maryam Ado Bayero     Saliu Shola Taofeek     AbdulRazaq Abubakar Jiddah     Ayodele Olaosebikan     Onikijipa     Junior Secondary School Certificate Examinations     Odo-Owa     General Tunde Idiagbon International Airport     Babs Iwarere     Oro Grammar School     Wahab Femi Agbaje     Mohammed Haruna     John Olobayo     Raji Ayodele Kamaldeen     Sambo Murtala     Vasolar Consultoria     Yunus Lawal     Haruna Tambiri Mohammed     Habeeb Abdullahi Al-Ilory     Jumoke Gafar     Fola Consultant     Trade Lenda SME Fair    

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Offa     AbdulHamid Adi     Agboola Abdulraheem     Ronke Adeyemi     Ogbondoroko     Kazeem Gbolagade     National Union Of Road Transport Workers     AbdulRasaq Abdulmajeed Alaro     Abdullahi Atanda     Ayotunde Emmanuel Alao     Bilikis Oladimeji     Taofik Abiodun Ahmed     Kayode Zubair     Aishatu Ahmed Gobir     Pacify Labs     Sabitiyu Grillo     Jide Oyinloye     Muideen Olaniyi Alalade     Toyin Sanusi     KWSIEC     TESCOM     Ayoade Akinnibosun     Otoge     Abdulmumini AbdulRazaq     Sulyman Age AbdulKareem     Noah Yusuf     Women Radio     Afetu Of Alabe     Abdulkadir Remi Hawawu     Village Alive Development Association     Kunle Akogun     Mansurat Amuda-Kannike     Ilesha-Baruba     Marufat Oladosu     Tafida Of Kaiama     Royal FM     Kwara Pdp     Col. Taiwo     Alloy Chukwuemeka     Kwara State Council Of Chiefs     Just Event Online     Zulu Gambari     Kayode Alabi     Jimba Babatunde     Ophthalmological Society Of Nigeria     Abdullah Janet Amudat     AbdulQowiy Olododo     Wale Oladepo     Oju Ekun Sarumi     Sheikh Hamzat Yusuf Ariyibi     March 18     Makama Of Kaiama     Tunde Saad     SGBN     Dar-Al-Handasah Consultants     Fatai Adeniyi Garba     Siraj Oyewale     Trade Lenda SME Fair     Mohammed Lawal     Halimah Perogi     Taofeek Ibraheem     Muyiwa Oladipo Kanu     Alapansapa     Salami Adekunle     Rice Farmers Association Of Nigeria     Mustapha Olanipekun     Aminat Omodara     Yusuf Abdulkadir     Ilorin Descendants Progressive Union     Gurei     Bolaji Gambari     Esuwoye     Mohammed Halidu     Abdulrazak Shehu Akorede     Kehinde Baale     Ilorin Muslim Community     General Hospital, Ilorin