I think this is the time we need TTAG to rather address the government than adressing CETAG.
TTAG should protest for the government to pay our lecturers their rightful incentive rather than appealing to CETAG as if they are the ones at fault.
Nevertherless I am not trying to be bias.
Imagine if it were to be any other profession that threatened the government with strike, government will not hesitate to settle them but when it comes to teachers, the government will be playing back and forth game with them.
The fact that this strike took this long means that first the government does not have any or little regard for the teachers and secondly, the government does not care about us the students if not, the government would have sort things out with CETAG long ago.
Can we even begin to comprehend the struggles of students who toil to scrape together their semester provisions,
only to face the looming specter of a restart? The whispers of a fresh start spread like wildfire, leaving us bewildered and desperate. In a Ghana where the cost of living has skyrocketed, where every cedi counts, and every sacrifice is a testament to our resilience, we find ourselves at the mercy of uncertainty.
To crown it, we should not forget as teacher trainees that we will also face this predicament one day if things are not settled properly this time round
TTAG should find a way to communicate with the government for the right thing to be done not to be addressing CETAG all the time.
I come in peace and I rest my case.
Thank you.
TORNYEGBEDO EMMANUEL
(Peki College Of Education)
The hustle is real in case the government don't know
ReplyDeleteSure
ReplyDeleteHow long should we be uncertain