Tuesday 17 December 2013

At last, ASUU suspends five-month-old strike

National President, ASUU, Nasir Issa-Fagge

The Academic Staff Union of Universities on Tuesday announced the suspension of the union strike that has crippled the nation’s public universities for close to six months.
Addressing a press conference in the Federal Universities of Technology, Minna, the Niger State capital, the National President of ASUU, Dr. Nasir Fagge, said the union had agreed to suspend the strike after a meeting of the National Executive Council which started on Monday.
Fagge also listed the components of the agreement which the union had with the Federal Government, which led to the resolution of the long-drawn crisis

Via; @FreshMindWorld

Sunday 8 December 2013

Nigerian couple jailed for N4.9bn UK fraud



Two members of a Nigerian gang, that executed an almost £19m (N4.9bn) global Internet banking scam, in which they hacked the accounts of nearly 2,500 people.
DailyMail reports that, Aderoju Bammeke, 22, and his girlfriend Jessica Ogunyemi, 20, both of Manchester, were the UK ‘platform’ for a Nigerian ‘phishing’ scam that made £41,000 (N10.6m) in just two months.
The gang reportedly sent fake emails to customers of banks in UK, including Barclays and Halifax.
The emails told recipients that their accounts had been hacked and asked them to complete a form with their log-in details.
But when victims obliged, Bammeke stepped in and helped the gang log in to steal money.
Investigators said Ogunyemi, who is a fashion marketing student, helped Bammeke launder the proceeds by putting funds in accounts, hiding cash and allowing him to buy her a £2,400 (N620,745)Vauxhall Corsa.
The Manchester Crown Court jailed Bammeke for three-and-a-half years after admitting conspiracy to commit fraud and unauthorised computer use.
Ogunyemi admitted five counts of money laundering and was given a suspended prison sentence.
Also, investigators found evidence of the scam on seven devices at Bammeke’s home, which had accessed 181 accounts from his address.
But Barclays found 2,439 customers had been affected and investigators say the true scale of the fraud will never be known.
Bammeke admitted he had been involved in the scam for more than a year. He played a ‘key role’ as England’s ‘platform’ for the scam, the court heard.
He said if the gang had tried to log into accounts from Nigeria it would have triggered the banks’ alarm systems.
Simon Nichol, defending Bammeke, said he felt regret and remorse for his actions.
He said his involvement – which began in an effort to tackle student debt – was ‘sporadic’ and although the scam was large scale with international dimensions, Bammeke’s part was not.
Michael Lavery, defending Ogunyemi, said she had brought shame on her family, including her train driver father and mother who works for Manchester council.
He said she had been ‘naive,’ she was predicted to get a first in her degree and was no longer in a relationship with Bammeke.

Source : Punch Nigeria
Via; @FreshMindWorld

I like to show my shape –Juliet Ibrahim

Juliet Ibrahim

Background
My name is Juliet Ibrahim, an actress and I was born in Accra, Ghana. I am the eldest of four children. I grew up in several countries- Ivory Coast, Lebanon, Liberia and Ghana.  Some of the countries I grew up in were war-torn countries and I experienced war in Lebanon, Ivory Coast and Liberia. This made me grow up and stronger than I should be.   As the firstborn, I had the responsibility of taking care of my siblings and helping my mother during those periods of conflicts. My father is a Lebanese businessman, who runs a supermarket. He kept moving his business from one country to the other as a result of wars. I read marketing, advertising and public relations at the Ghana Institute of Journalism.
Growing up
I am a half-caste and as a child, there was no colour difference- you are just happy with where you are and who you are with. Then, Ghanaians accepted people for who they are.  However, I am being told now that I am receiving more favours because of my fair complexion.   It seems people now have issues with coloured people.
Acting
I have always wanted to be in the spotlight. As a child, I wanted to be a very popular musician and there was an opportunity in 2005. Somebody called me for an audition and I was given a lead role where I acted alongside Majid Michel. After my first movie, I got another role.  It has been nine years in the industry. Though not an easy feat, I thank God. Recently, I produced my own film and it will be premiered in Lagos this December.
Challenges
Sometimes, it is related with my colour.  The fact that I am of a mixed race makes people think that I receive preferential treatment. That is a huge misconception.  There are times my colour is a disadvantage and I cannot get certain roles. They would rather give the role to a dark-skinned actor especially if both parents are dark in the movie. Sometimes, the fair-complexioned actors are cast in the roles of husband snatchers and other bad characters. People don’t know that we go through a lot.  It has been very challenging to get a role that can elevate my talent.
The real Juliet Ibrahim
I am just a very simple person.   I am hardworking, a businesswoman and a mother of a three-year-old son. I do charity work too. I released two of my singles this year.
Relationship
I am married to a Ghanaian, who is a quarter-caste. His mother is half Lebanese and half Ghanaian. We met several years ago when he was living in the United States of America. I was attracted to his personality and intelligence. We kept in touch and got married three years ago when he relocated to Ghana.
Family life
My family copes very well when I am away working. My husband works too. He is currently out of the country. I miss my son a lot at such times but my mother is taking good care of him.
Any other business
Apart from acting, I operate a boutique in Accra. I have a beauty salon as well.  I also run a charity organisation for cancer awareness. It has been running since 2010. I have my production house and I also do music. I have a modelling and talent agency, where I recruit young people who are interested in taking part in movies and television commercials.
Style
I used to wear anything and walk around with my flip flops.  Now, I am conscious of the fact that style matters and anything I do as a celebrity is a part of me.   I always have to look my best always.  Style, for me, is wearing what I am comfortable in. I try my best to always play with my shape and make sure my figure comes out.  I can try any kind of dress. I am very dramatic with my dressing.
Favourite fashion accessories
Sunglasses and handbags.
Wish list
If I were not an actor, I would have been a musician.  Also, if I did not get the chance to be in the spotlight, I would have been a very famous lawyer.

Source : Punch Nigeria
Via; @FreshMindWorld

Bride escapes death after wedding

| credits: Stanley Ogidi

A bride narrowly escaped death in an auto crash while on her way from her wedding. The accident involving a NNPC  tanker with number plate XG 321 MKA, a cargo truck and two saloon cars happened at about 4: 45pm on Saturday, close to the Otedola bridge, Alausa, on Lagos/Ibadan Expressway.
Our reporter who witnessed the accident said the NNPC truck, while descending the slop from Alausa at top speed, could not hold its break. It then ran into the first car and squashed the second one against the cargo truck.
The bride and her husband were said to have jumped out of their car.
When our reporter got to the scene of the accident, the groom was no where in sight. The groom’s elder sister who spoke to our repoter while cuddling her baby explained that they were just coming from the wedding reception of the couple.
She was seen kneeling down and thanking God for their escape but refused to give the name of the couple.
The fire coming out of the truck was put out by sympathisers as the tanker was carrying petroleum product. The accident also resulted in  gridlock which was controlled by men of the Federal Road Safety Corps.

Source : Punch Nigeria
Via; @FreshMindWorld

Friday 6 December 2013

Nelson Mandela changed the course of history – for South Africa and the US The South African president, who was labelled a terrorist, became more than a historical figure; he was a transformer

Nelson Mandela takes the oath during his inauguration as South African president in Pretoria on 10 May 1994. Photograph: Walter Dhladhla/AFP/Getty Images


President Nelson Mandela was truly a transformative force in the history of South Africa and the world. My heart weighs heavy about his transition, but we are reassured because his life was full, and we know the imprint he left on our world is everlasting.
If ever the teaching that "Suffering breeds character. Character breeds faith. In the end faith will not disappoint" rang true, it did in the life of Mandela.
Despite imprisonment in Robben Island for 25 years and 8 months, Mandela never lost faith in winning freedom for the South African people. Suffering breeds character.
Mandela was a transformational figure; to say he was a "historical figure" would not give him his full due. Some people move through history as being the "first this or that" – just another figure in a lineage of persons. To be a transformer is to plan, to have the vision to chart the course, the skills to execute. To be transformational is to have the courage of one's convictions, to sacrifice, to risk life and limb, to lay it all on the line. "Historical figures" will reference Nelson Mandela.
I recall marching against apartheid with Oliver Tambo and the enormous rally at Trafalgar Square in November 1985. I later met with the prime minister, Margaret Thatcher to decry Britain's economic, political and military support of the apartheid regime. Let us not forget that Britain, the US, all of the western powers, labelled Mandela a terrorist and steadfastly propped up the apartheid regime – they were on the wrong side of history. I appealed to her to support the release of Mandela, and departed for South Africa.
My heart burst with excitement on that day of Mandela's release from Victor Verster prison, 11 February 1990. When word got out about his impending release, maids started doing the toya toya in the hallways, beating pots and pans, weeping and demonstrating. "In the end, faith will not disappoint."
I met Mandela and Winnie at City Hall, and when we spoke later at our hotel, he thanked me and recalled hearing about my 1984 convention speech. Even from his jail cell, he was keenly aware of the outside world, and the ebbs and flows of the world. Three years later, as part of the official US delegation, I was honoured to celebrate Nelson Mandela's inauguration as president of the new, free South Africa.
We forged an everlasting relationship. We've welcomed him to our home and headquarters in Chicago. We've met numerous times in South Africa – the last time in 2010 where we spoke about boxing, sports, politics and traded baseball caps.
Mandela was a giant of immense and unwavering intellect courage and moral authority. He chose reconciliation over retaliation. He changed the course of history.
Now, both South Africa and the US have unfinished business to complete.
Nelson Mandela is not gone, he remains with us always. He'll always be a chin bar to pull up on. He has indeed forged South Africa as a new "beauty from ashes". He has left this earth, but he soars high among the heavens, and his eloquent call for freedom and equality is still heard amongst the winds and the rains, and in the hearts of the people the world over.

via @FreshMindWorld

Thursday 5 December 2013

Two million passwords stolen from Facebook, Twitter and Google

Major sites have begun resetting passwords for compromised accounts, although researchers estimate that most targets were from the Netherlands

More than two million passwords from popular social media sites including Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter have been stolen and posted online by hackers.

The attack has been described as “fairly global” with victims “scattered all over the world”, although the vast majority of comprised users (some 96.66 per cent) were using computers with IP addresses located in the Netherlands.
Security researchers employed by Trustwavestumbled upon the hoard of stolen data whilst investigating a botnet known as ‘Pony’. Botnets are networks of hacked computers created by criminal gangs to use for a number of illegal tasks online, although it’s thought that these passwords were stolen using keylogger software.
A previous attack using the Pony botnet was described by the researchers as “hit-and-run operation,” whilst this attack was carried out over a number of weeks with the hackers taking in a “fairly stable and consistent” number of passwords each day.
A screencap showing the domains affected.
Other sites targeted included Russian social media sites vk.com andodnoklassniki.ru, as well as Google and Yahoo. Trustwave notified the sites involved before posting their findings online, and spokespersons from both Facebook and Twitter have told the Huffington Post that accounts found on the list have had their passwords reset.
However, it seems that the passwords themselves were not doing much to help protect users in the first place. The researchers noted that the top ten most commonly used passwords in the list included “123456”, “123456789”, “1234”, “password” and “1”.
“And it all goes downhill from there,” wrote the researchers in a blog post. “There were more terrible passwords than excellent ones, more bad passwords than good, and the majority, as usual, is somewhere in between in the Medium category.”
Whilst a similar cache of leaked Myspace passwords from 2006 revealed that the top ten most common passwords comprised 0.9 per cent of the total, this recent leak ups that percentage to 2.4.
However, there is some good news, as users are apparently using longer passwords more consistently. Passwords with more than 10 characters made up 17 per cent of the total in 2006, and in 2013 this figure has risen to 46 per cent
.
Via; @FreshMindWorld

Two arrested with N11m marijuana

Ndidi and Adegoke
| credits: Olufemi Atoyebi

The Oyo State Police Command has intercepted a lorry with 646 bags of weed suspected to be marijuana. The police also arrested two suspects, David Ndidi and Toyin Adegoke, in connection with the discovery.
Commissioner of Police, Mohamed Ndabawa, said the command acted after intelligence was received on the activities of the suspects.
He said “On November 29, a consignment of weed suspected to be Indian hemp was packaged for conveyance in a truck at a cannabis plantation in Eleja village, near Akanran, Ibadan.
The police intercepted the truck with number plate, Lagos XR 967 JJJ. The value of the weed is N11m. Ndidi and Adegoke were arrested while the driver escaped from the scene. We are still making effort to arrest the rest of the people involved.”
Ndidi, 30, told our correspondent that he was an assistant to the driver of the vehicle and that he did not know that the bags of weed were marijuana.
“I was hired to assist the driver and my fee was N10,000. The bags were locked at the back of the vehicle and I did not suspect that they were marijuana. When police stopped us, he jumped and ran into the bush, but I waited because I did not suspect that we were transporting marijuana,” he said.
Toyin told our correspondent that she traded in orange and that she came from Ilorin to buy the fruit in the village when she was arrested.
She said, “I was buying oranges to be transported to Ilorin when I heard gunshots. I thought they were armed robbers, so I ran just as others did. But when I realised they were policemen, I stopped because I knew that I was doing legal business. But I was arrested despite the other man (Ndidi) telling them that I was not one of them. I appeal to the police to investigate the matter again and visit my house in Ilorin. I know nothing about marijuana and the man arrested in the truck,” she said.

Source : Punch Nigeria
Via; @FreshMindWorld

Tuesday 3 December 2013

Burberry to appeal Chinese trademark suspension on iconic tartan pattern

The decision will not come into effect until the appeal is heard and it would only affect Burberry's leather goods division.

Burberry has appealed a decision by Chinese authorities to cancel a trademark protection on its iconic tartan pattern.
Chinese authorities suspended the protection on Burberry's signature look after the company failed to make specific use of the tartan pattern in the country for three years, according to China's Trademark Office website.
The decision will not come into effect until the appeal is heard and it would only affect Burberry's leather goods division.
Burberry said it is "confident" that the appeal will be successful and vowed to protect the brand "against those who use its trademarks unlawfully".
"The Burberry Check remains a registered trademark exclusively owned by Burberry and no other parties can use the mark without Burberry's proper authorization," the company said.
China is a key market for the British luxury giant with the Asia Pacific region accounting for 37 per cent of its retail and wholesale revenue in 2012.

Via; @FreshMindWorld

Commercially able: Why Christopher Kane is the new king of fashion

Scottish-born designer named British Designer of the Year

Head of a world-renowned brand at barely 30 and the most eagerly-awaited show of every London Fashion Week, Scottish-born designer Christopher Kane is British fashion’s golden child.

His designs have been lauded as fashion’s (latest) second coming since his graduation show, but tonight’s British Fashion Awards was the final seal on his success, as Kane received the evening’s plum accolade: British Designer of the Year.
It was well-deserved. Not because Kane’s star has been in the ascendant since he left Central Saint Martins in 2006, but because this year marked the apotheosis of his success.
Back in January, the Kering group – formerly known as PPR, the luxury goods behemoth behind the like of Balenciaga, Sergio Rossi and fellow Brit brands Alexander McQueen and Stella McCartney – acquired a 51 per cent stake in Kane’s business, just weeks ahead of the designer’s stand-out autumn/winter 2013 London Fashion Week show.
That acquisition was the first cash injection in a British brand since the former Gucci Group took a stake in McQueen back in 2001, a show of confidence not only in Kane’s undoubted ability, but in a new generation of British fashion talent as a whole.
Christopher Kane is the most visible of that new wave of designers, which now includes the likes of Erdem, Mary Katrantzou, Peter Pilotto and Simone Rocha – all of whom received award nominations. What these names have all done is shirk London’s reputation for coupling creative nous with zero commercial acumen. Kane and his ilk are able not only to whip up fashion fantasy, but to package said fantasy as clothes you and I can buy. For a price.
He’s done it not only for his own label, but also at Versace’s Versus line, where Kane was creative director from 2009-2012. The award was presented to him by none less than Donatella Versace, a supporter since Kane’s debut.
What Kane’s award, and investment, represents is London Fashion Week’s young guard coming of age. Indeed, the 2013 British Fashion Awards were practically devoted to it. The likes of Nicholas Kirkwood and JW Anderson were also lauded, winning Accessory Designer of the Year and New Establishment awards respectively.
Alongside the new, this year’s awards celebrated the establishment – and not just shortlist stalwarts like Burberry Prorsum’s Christopher Bailey, who scooped a pair of awards as Designer Brand of the Year and Menswear Designer of the Year. Kate Moss and Suzy Menkes, fashion editor of the International New York Times (formerly of The Independent) were both hurrahed for their contributions to the industry. The Special Recognition Awards highlighted Moss’ quarter-century as a model, and Menkes’ 25 years at the INYT (formerly known as the International Herald Tribune). Kate Moss coupled the celebration with a party to launch her spread for the 60th anniversary edition of Playboy.
The evening wasn’t without its surprises. Harry Styles received the British Style Award, voted for by the public, while the inaugural International Designer of the Year left London, going to Miuccia Prada.

Via; @FreshMindWorld

The Big College Debate: Is Fashion Too Sexualised?

EVERY Monday morning, the students of   Condé Nast's Greek Street-based fashion college are tasked with fighting out a debate on Twitter - and everybody's invited. Watch the action play out by following the @CNCollege account and join in - we'd love to hear your views.
This morning's debate, which will run between the hours of 9am and 10am, will explore the subject: 
Picture credit: Nick Harvey

"'Fashion is becoming a branch of the porn industry,'" says Caryn Franklin. Have brands over stepped the mark with their ad campaigns?"
Don't forget to use the hashtag #cncollege with your Tweets.
Where do you stand on the issue? Join the debate here.

Via; @FreshMindWorld

And The BFA Winners Are…

CHRISTOPHER KANE was named Womenswear Designer of the Year at tonight's British Fashion Awards, in the year thatinvestment in his brand by French luxury conglomerate Kering confirmed him as an international fashion star of the future. Meanwhile, LVMH - Kering's luxury competitor - also 

Picture credit: Getty

saw its new young British signing collect an award, as JW Anderson scooped the New Establishment Designer award.

Burberry celebrated two wins on the evening, picking up both the Designer Brand of the Year and the Menswear Designer of the Year awards, while Nicholas Kirkwood received the Accessory Designer of the Year award. Edie Campbell beat Cara Delevingne and Sam Rollinson to the Model of the Year prize, and Miuccia Prada was honoured with the event's inaugural International Designer of the Year award.
British Fashion Awards 2013
Rosie Huntington

Kate Moss

Alexa Chung

Tom Sturridge and Sienna Miller both wore Burberry.

                                                   Donatella Versace.
"The roll call of winners announced this evening is a phenomenal display of talent in the fashion industry," said Natalie Massenet, chairman of the British Fashion Council. "The British Fashion Awards gives us the chance to commend not only the winners but celebrate all of the individuals that contribute to the incredible achievements that make London the best fashion destination in the world. I'm incredibly proud to be a part of the ceremony this evening, set in the heart of our creative capital; it provides the perfect climax to a truly momentous year of British fashion."
FULL LIST OF WINNERS
  • Womenswear Designer of the Year - Christopher Kane
  • Menswear Designer of the Year - Burberry
  • International Designer of the Year - Miuccia Prada for Prada
  • Designer Brand of the Year - Burberry
  • Accessory Designer of the Year - Nicholas Kirkwood
  • Emerging Womenswear Designer - Simone Rocha
  • Emerging Menswear Designer - Agi & Sam
  • New Establishment Designer - JW Anderson                  
  • Model of the Year - Edie Campbell
  • Red Carpet Award - Erdem
  • Isabella Blow Award for Fashion Creator - Lady Amanda Harlech
  • British Style Award brought to you by Vodafone (voted by the public) - Harry Styles
  • Special Recognition Award - Kate Moss
  • Special Recognition Award - Suzy Menkes
  • Outstanding Achievement in Fashion - Terry and Tricia Jones, founders of i-D
Via; @FreshMindWorld







Michelle Dockery Opens Her Diary


DOWNTON ABBEY star Michelle Dockery travelled to Syria with Oxfam last month to meet refugees living in Jordan. As the charity launches its Syrian Winter Appeal today, the actress shares her experiences and personal photo album from what was a truly moving trip.
"Every day there is another story about the Syrian conflict. However, little is known of the millions of refugees who have had to quite literally run from their homes as bombs bear down on them. I wanted to meet these people, hear their stories and understand the life they came from and the life they now live in.
On my first day, I visited Zaatari camp on the outskirts of Amman near the Syrian border.  Zaatari is one of the biggest formal camps, this time last year a sprinkling of tents, now the fourth largest city in Jordan. This is a bleak place bang in the middle of the desert, boiling in the summer and below freezing in the winter. I met three families on the camp, mainly women who willingly told me their stories, a relief to share the terrible burdens and trauma they carry so closely. Many of these women came from wonderful and full lives back in Syria, with beautiful homes, wonderful neighbours and family all around them. Their children in education with bright futures ahead, the same children who now run around with the clothes they fled in. Life on camp is hard, there is little to do each day, nothing changes and there is no end in sight.
The second day we visited a family in the host communities. These are refugees living in rented accommodation outside the formal camps. Many people have fled literally with nothing; they have no money and are unable to work. The family I met had ten people living in a flat suited for three. The conditions were shocking. I met small boy, who had been severely unwell due to the damp on the walls. As I heard the heart-breaking stories from his mother, he coughed, clinging onto her.
Our lives go on but the people I met remain, stuck in a no man's land, unsure of when they will be able to reunite with their family, or go back to their beloved homeland.  None of the people I met would have ever thought they would need to ask for help but now they have no choice. They have nothing and they need help to be able to survive day by day. Its winter now and it will be freezing. I think of the cold concrete flats, the make shift tents and how cold it must be at night. They need blankets, they need stoves, they need clothes and we can help Oxfam supply this."

Via; @FreshMindWorld

Mother burns daughter with hot iron

Blessing
| credits: Comfort Oseghale

A woman, identified simply as Mrs. Maxwell, has been arrested by the police for allegedly assaulting her daughter, Blessing, with a hot pressing iron.
Blessing, a primary three student of the Lagos Model Nursery and Primary School, Ikeja GRA, was allegedly assaulted last Monday by her mother for licking the baby’s food.
PUNCH Metro gathered that the incident came to light after a neighbour, who lived within the Police College Barracks, Ikeja, with the Maxwells, allegedly called the authorities of the LMNPS to complain about Blessing’s condition. Blessing’s father is said to be a police corporal.
A source within the school, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said, “It was last Friday that we got the anonymous call. At the time, two of Blessing’s younger siblings were in school, so we called them aside and asked after Blessing.
“At first, they were both scared that they would get into trouble with their mother if they told the truth but they eventually opened up and said their mother had used a hot pressing iron on Blessing.”
The Head Teacher of the school, accompanied by some other employees of the school, was said to have visited  Blessing at home.
It was learnt that on arriving at the Maxwells’ house, Blessing was seen sitting outside their flat, sporting burn marks all over her body.
The source said, “We tried to question Blessing about what happened to her, but she was scared of her mother. Eventually, we went into the house and confronted the mother, but she lied that hot water had mistakenly poured on Blessing.
“When we asked if Blessing had received medical attention for her injuries, her mother got annoyed and dragged Blessing into the house. She then refused to answer more questions. Since it was a police barracks, we thought it wise to leave quietly before things got out of hand.
“The most painful aspect of the whole issue is that despite Blessing’s wounds, their neighbour told us that she had been carrying out house chores like before. From what I saw, that girl is so injured that I didn’t expect that she would be able to come to school for the rest of the term. Not one of us guessed that she was being abused at home.”
PUNCH Metro gathered that both mother and child were picked up by officials of the Lagos State Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation after the school authorities alerted the ministry. Blessing was said to have been picked up by a Lagos State Ambulance Service bus.
When our correspondent contacted the Child Director, WAPA, Mrs. Fadairo, she said, “I cannot talk at this time. We are at the hospital and Blessing is in critical condition.”
Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, Ngozi Braide, could not be reached for comment.

Source : Punch Nigeria
Via; @FreshMindWorld

ASUU strike: Confusion, despair greet FG’s ultimatum

National President, ASUU, Nasir Issa-Fagge

Federal Government’s ultimatum to striking university teachers further compounds students’ ordeals, CHARLES ABAH writes
For over 150 days, Emmanuel Eze, a post-graduate student of Mass Communication at the Benue State University, Makurdi, has been idling away at home, no thanks to the nationwide strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities.
Like thousands of other students in the country, Eze initially hoped that the strike would be short. But it had dragged on indefinitely and in the process, delayed the progress of his academic programmme, which, he thought, would have ended last September.
To make matters worse, just when he had begun to look forward to a resolution of the conflict, his hope was suddenly dashed as the Federal Government, through the Supervising Minister for Education, Nyesom Wike, issued a directive to the striking lecturers last Thursday, ordering them to go back to work before December 4 or face dismissal. ASUU had quickly responded by asking its members to ignore the order.
Shocked by the new development, Eze wonders what has gone wrong again. Surprised that the matter has taken a different turn, especially at a time the affected students are expecting the industrial action to be called off, he has silently asked what has come over ASUU leadership and the Federal Government.
Up until Monday, Eze was still at the crossroads, not knowing who to believe between the government and ASUU. But he is not alone in this catch-22 situation. Mr. Chike Ogbonna, whose two sons are undergraduates of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, is in a similar quandary.
Indeed, Ogbonna has not allowed his children to return to school as directed by the UNN authorities because he is not sure whether or not their teachers will go back to the classrooms. Instead, he has decided to simply wait and see what happens next.
Even as stakeholders were contemplating the development, President Goodluck Jonathan and one of his senior aides, Dr. Doyin Okupe, fired another salvo. While Jonathan said the striking teachers’ action was subversive, Okupe noted that the enemies of the state were behind the five-months-old strike.
However, the teachers seem unperturbed by the FG’s position. The Chairman of the University of Lagos chapter of ASUU, Dr. Karol Ogbinaka, insists that they are not returning to class.
Also Ogbinaka’s counterpart at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Prof. Akinola Adegbola, says Wike’s directive will not alter the union’s position on the ongoing strike.
As Ogbinaka and Adegbola continue to sound tough, many universities have asked their students to return to the classrooms immediately. Among such are UNN, Enugu State University of Technology, Enugu, University of Abuja, Adekunle Ajasin University, Ondo and the Abia State University.
Yet as the face-off rages, not many of the students, are happy with the FG.  For instance, a student of the University of Lagos, Vincent Obia, describes the latest directive by the government as undemocratic.
Obia says, “I feel the FG is being autocratic. It is gradually going back to the heyday of the military. ASUU is a legitimate union and the FG should honour its agreement with the body instead of threatening to sack the lecturers.
“Although we students are suffering, I feel that what ASUU members are demanding is a necessary request that will help to restore sanity in the nation’s university system.”
Just as Joshua Adeyemi, a Guidance and Counselling undergraduate of the University of Ibadan, notes that the FG’s directive to ASUU will not yield positive results, Oluwafemi Ogunjobi of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife thinks the government is dishonest in its approach to resolving the crisis.
The OAU student, who urges his colleagues to be patient in returning to classes, says, “ASUU has come a long way to turn back at this critical stage.
“The threat to resume on December 4 shows the government’s insincerity, not only to the education sector, but also to the demands of good governance. It further shows that the last FG/ASUU meeting was a mere bait to trap the striking teachers.”
But another student, Eyitayo Ifeoluwa of the University of Abuja, think differently. She says the FG and ASUU should share the blame in the face-off. According to her, both parties are not sincere in ensuring that normalcy returns on campuses.
“The current misunderstanding between ASUU and the FG borders on sincerity. The government and ASUU are insincere in their dealings and that is why the strike is taking this long to resolve. Assuming there is trust, we would have passed through this stage by now,” Ifeoluwa says.
However, another OAU student, Damilola Ajoke, says the larger portion of the blame should go to ASUU, for refusing to shift ground. The young woman, who says her support for ASUU has waned and that she is tired of staying at home, urges the striking teachers to return to the classroom.
Proffering solution to the logjam, Ogunjobi, however, urges the two parties to shift ground in order to arrive at “a mutual agreement.”

Source : Punch Nigeria
Via; @FreshMindWorld