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National Union of Ghana Students: the lost treasure

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Across time and space, students have contributed immensely to the development of their nations. They have done so even in their individual capacities.
But the contributions become so massive as to become matters of immense historical record when they are made by students in their organized form, and examples of this abound across the world.

During the apartheid era, the South African Students Union played a very critical role in dismantling the inhumane system of discrimination against black people in South Africa. Of course, it did so with the interest of the South African student in mind.

In Ghana, the organized group that has performed these roles is the National Union of Ghana Students. Formed over four (4) decades ago, the national student body has made significant strides in protecting the interest of students.

For instance, during the Second Republic, as Kpessa (2007) reports, the union successfully opposed the withdrawal of student allowances by the government. But it did not only protect the interest of students, it also campaigned vigorously for democracy and against military rule and its concomitant features of despotism, corruption and autocracy.

The union criticized and vehemently opposed the human rights record of the Acheampong regime and was instrumental in the falling of the government and others like it. Those were the days when school authorities and governments trembled at the mention of NUGS; but those were the days when NUGS was a treasure.
But now, all that glowing glory is resigned to the dustbin of history and with it the treasure the union was. For some years now, the union has become a conduit for political beehiving where through the backdoor, politicians use the leaders to achieve their selfish gains. It is now a vehicle for the playing out of bloated egos, the pursuit of personal partisan parochies and the nourishing of the gardens of corruption.

These have manifested themselves in various ways, the most notable being the inability of the Union to successfully conduct a credible congress and elect new leaders for some years now. Of course the inevitable consequence of this, namely the failure to properly articulate the concerns of students of Ghana and agitate for same to be addressed is not lost on anybody.

Indeed, the current state of affairs has not only deprived Ghanaian students of the treasure of a union to behold but has occasioned a situation where the mention of NUGS arouses a bitter feeling among innocent students. In other words, it has become an element of poignant reminiscence for students; hopeless and helpless without a union to advance our interest. How can we cope with the callousness of school authorities and policy makers who take far-reaching decisions with only little doses of sensitivity to the plight of students?

In the form of fee hikes, arbitrary dismissals, examination bans, strike actions, etc., government, management of schools across the country and teachers subject students to enormous torture. But alas, there is no one to fight against these things. Or perhaps more accurately, there no longer is; because we used to have a union, a treasure which we have lost to partisan, ethnic and sectarian frivolities.

So what can students of Ghana do? How do we proceed from here, and to which destination? In proffering solutions, some members have recommended the dissolution of the union but they fail to answer the question, “by who?” Who has the locus to dissolve the union and how?

Unlike a presidential commission which can easily be dissolved at the behest of the president, NUGS is a registered organization with an operating constitution and a diverse membership with diverse interests, each against another, sometimes in a diabolically complicated manner. Yet the constitution does not provide any opportunity for such an action, so not even congress in the widest imagination can take a decision to dissolve the union because even though it is the highest decision making organ of the union, it is also subject to the constitution.

But even if there was the constitutional leeway to dissolve the union and it was actually done, then what next? Were students to remain without a union, like a flock without a shepherd or a herd without a herd boy? What would the implications be in the circumstances? Students of Ghana cannot survive without a union; that is unimaginable. So dissolving the union is not a viable option.

But what ought we to do? We must take the bull by the horns. The first step is the realization that no one is obliged to be a member of NUGS; it is a voluntary organization whose membership is open to choice. Second, it is necessary for the silent majority, the masses of students who feel strongly about these issues to assert themselves. The fate students are suffering now is the result of the suppression of the majority who have refused to assert themselves but have rather chosen to be cowed by the few greedy ones. Third, genuine student leaders must put themselves together and launch a new students union with a national outlook as an alternative to NUGS.

A few questions arise from this proposition. Would these genuine student leaders not also turn out to be just as greedy when they get power? How possible is it that any other body can stand the muscle of NUGS since the latter has gained significant recognition on boards and state institutions.

Human beings are unpredictable and one cannot guarantee that anybody who will begin such a crusade would stay genuine through and through. But it is fair to assert that any students body that shall emerge as a result of the incapacitation of NUGS must be able to learn from the fatal mistakes NUGS has made over the years and put in place structural measures to prevent the untamed centralization of power which has been the Achilles’ heel of NUGS.

The recognition the union has is a concomitant of legitimacy. Once the legitimacy wanes, the recognition will give way and there must be another body to claim both the legitimacy and the recognition when NUGS is no longer on the scene.

In sum, it is clear that the woes of NUGS can never be healed; the union can never get better again because the interests shattering it apart are permanent and entrenched. Yet students cannot survive in this hostile environment without a union. Therefore we have reached a point where the emergence of an alternative union is inevitable.

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