The Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, on
Wednesday said it may be compelled to drag the Federal and Kogi State
governments before the National Human Rights Commission, NHRC, if they
fail to take full responsibility for the death of the former President
of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, Festus Iyayi. Mr.
Iyayi died in an accident allegedly caused by a vehicle on the Kogi
State governor’s convoy.
The General Secretary of the NLC, Chris
Uyott, told PREMIUM TIMES in a telephone interview that though the NLC
President, Abdulwahed Omar, had earlier demanded that the Federal and
Kogi State governments be held accountable for the death of the eminent
scholar, the Congress may petition the NHRC to ensure that he did not
die in vain.
In his remarks, The NLC President, who
described Mr. Iyayi’s demise as “painful and tragic”, said his death was
not only a blow to ASUU and the NLC, but a blow to the entire country
to which he committed his entire life.
“He was a great scholar, who bestrode
virtually all the disciplines like a colossus,” he said, adding that
though he was a Management Science Scholar, Mr. Iyayi was remarkable in
his reputation a novelist and literary icon, whose works were a standard
read for literary students in universities across the world.
“Iyayi was a leading authority in
Industrial Relations and an activist to the core, often deploying his
prodigious energy and intellectual prowess to the cause. As President of
the Academic Staff Union in 1986, he set the tone and pace of ASUU
protests, in spite of the overbearing military government. It certainly
must be in appreciation of this that the executive of ASUU, had always
thought if fit to
involve him in negotiations,” Mr. Omar said.
He said the deceased’s passion for
activism knew no bounds, noting in particular the years of his
sabbatical with the Congress when he impacted positively on the
activities of the labour body.
“Iyayi’s death leaves a sour taste in
the mouth and is totally avoidable. It is blamable on federal
government’s act of criminal negligence on the one hand and executive
lawlessness/impunity on the part of the Kogi State Governor who is fast
acquiring for himself an accident-prone reputation,” he said.
The Lokoja-Abuja stretch of road, which
he pointed out was one of the busiest in the country, had suffered
neglect by the Federal and Kogi State governments, as the contract for
its dualisation awarded about ten years ago to ease vehicular movement
and reduce accidents on the road is yet to be completed, and has caused
several accidents.
Mr. Omar said the NLC was of the view
that there was no justification for abandoning the road, stating the
government must be ready to let Nigerians know the facts of the
contract.
Government, he warned, would be doing
very little to help itself if it shielded, rather than prosecute the
criminals responsible for the non-completion of the road. He urged “all
siren-blowing and terror-dealing convoys to exercise utmost caution as
well as have regard for other road users.”
He also urged the National Assembly to
criminalise fatal road crashes as part of the process of bringing
accountability to road use.
Source: PremiumTimes Newspaper
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