By Achike Chude
And so we are told that the federal government, having failed to honour its agreement with ASUU, has now come up with the ingenious and perfect solution which is the speculated plan to proscribe the union. And just like in the dark days of military dictatorship, the government has propped up, encouraged, and is facilitating the emergence of a rival academic group within the university system to break the rank of ASUU.
When you have a minister of Labour in a country whose doctors
went on strike due to the same government’s refusal to honour another agreement
and the minister says that the frustrated doctors can run away from the country
because Nigeria has enough doctors, then you should weep and gnash your teeth –
because you know that the minister is guilty of egregious lies.
What a perverse and deleterious state of affairs! Because the recommended doctor to patients ratio of the United Nations is 1:600 (one doctor to six hundred patients). Nigeria’s doctor to patients’ ratio is 1:6000 (one doctor to six thousand patients). And worse, it will take 120 years for Nigeria to have enough doctors if they are no longer leaving the country.