I got a mail last month from a justifiably angry lecturer
at Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife asking why I have
not commented on the ASUU strike. He wondered whether I
was aware that Ife, where I schooled, had been out of session
since August last year. The mail made me very guilty that
I have kept quiet on the issue but what can I do, what can
we do? The university system has virtually collapsed in
this country with students now permanently on forced holidays.
That, I guess, is one 'achievement' of this administration.
And to show the 'commitment' of the people in power to education,
Professor Babalola Borishade, the Education Minister, told
us during the week that the minimum entry age to university
will soon be pegged at 18. Of course we all know that the
children of the elite finish secondary school nowadays at
age 12-15, so what will they be doing in the intervening
years?
Borishade's children and those of other fat cats in government
will travel abroad of course while children of poor people
could easily become thugs and touts. Their children do not
attend schools here anyway, at least a minister's daughter
recently confirmed that on this page where she questioned
the integrity of my academic qualification for the simple
reason that I schooled in Nigeria. Borishade's new idea
shows just how irresponsible this government has become
in the management of our educational system!
But that is not all. Those who should know have argued
that the only difference between this civilian administration
and the military regimes before it is that while the military
was killing Nigerians, this one is rather too 'benevolent'
to do that: it just allows Nigerians to die! In the last
couple of weeks, we have been spending all our productive
hours at fuel station, the cardinal 'achievement' this government
has been touting in the last three years.
Ironically, the sing-song across the country now is that
we should vote for continuity and you ask: continuity of
what? Well, the answer to this question was supplied by
no less a person than the respected Esama of Benin, Chief
Gabriel Igbinedion. From a text message which is being passed
around by GSM holders in Lagos, the Benin High Chief was
said to have gone to a political rally of his son, Chief
Lucky Igbinedion, the Edo State Governor. Apparently unable
to stomach the criticism against his son, he was reported
to have mounted the rostrum and said: "Edo people,
U na say Lucky fail, Lucky fail, and for dat, make im no
com back. Which kin sense be dat? If your own pikin fail
for school, e no go repeat the term?"
Well, I really do not want to believe the story that Igbinedion
failed. But the lesson from what could have been a lighter
mood joke from the ever amiable Esama of Benin is that most
of the campaign for continuity from Abuja to the states
is based on this logic that once you fail you automatically
deserve a second term.
So much for continuity!