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I Now Sell Potatoes – Nigerian University Lecturer Laments As ASUU Strike Enters Sixth Month

LECTURER

ASUU embarked on strike in February this year as it insists that the government must meet all of its demands.
 

 

A lecturer at the University of Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, Christiana Pam, has lamented how she has to resort to selling potatoes to survive the ongoing strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), which enters its sixth month.
ASUU embarked on strike in February this year as it insists that the government must meet all of its demands.
ASUU has maintained that the strike was as a result of the failure of the government to meet some demands such as the release of the revitalisation funds for universities, release of earned allowances for university lecturers, deployment of the University Transparency Accountability System (UTAS) for the payment of salaries and allowances of university lecturers, renegotiation.
Pam in an interview with Punch, after her picture went viral on social media over her trade, said she got drained financially in the early days of the strike.
According to her, some of her colleagues were envious as they had nothing to fall back on for survival during the strike.
She said that “When the first strike was declared, I had the assumption that within four weeks, it would be called off and we would resume. I was very hopeful and relaxed, waiting for it to be called off but after ASUU’s negotiations with the Federal Government, which didn’t end well as the demands of ASUU were obviously not met, the strike was extended.
“That was when it dawned on me that I needed to take a step because, within the first phase of the strike, I was already drained financially as I am new to the system and had yet to have the opportunity to save more money before the strike. So I thought of going home to Plateau State. I was so financially down that I had to borrow some money to take myself to my parents.
“My parents had always been farmers even before their retirement, so after their retirement, they continued farming. When I got back home, I joined them on the farm with the hope that after two weeks, the strike would be called off and I would be back to work but in what looked like a joke, I started with them by clearing the farm, planting and it got to harvesting time and I was still at home.
“So, I began to wonder what I could do to earn an income as I could not ask my retired parents for money because they should be the ones looking up to me. So, I decided to sell some of the potatoes we harvested from our farm and they would be appreciated in Akwa Ibom.
“I had to sell some of them in Jos to raise money to move the remaining ones to Akwa Ibom State and just try my hands and see how it would go. That was where I was spotted. I believe that you start with what you have. It is what you have that you can use to your advantage. I looked around and I asked myself what I had that I could use to sustain myself at this critical time and I discovered that what I had were potatoes.”
Reacting to the public perception over the move, Pam said it was as a result of the condition she found herself.
“I kept telling them shamelessly that I was on a farm with my parents, so when I started selling potatoes as a lecturer, I didn’t really feel anything. I just felt it was a condition I had found myself in. My colleagues said they envied me because I had something to sell when they did not. So, for me, I am okay with having something to do.
“My students even patronise me. They felt encouraged that I stooped to such a level as a lecturer when some of them were busy feeling pompous at home.”
Pam said she makes about N3,000 from each bag of potatoes she sold, adding that she hopes that the ongoing strike yields a positive result. Meanwhile, she called on her colleagues to be creative and find alternative means to survive.