The Federal Government, yesterday, reviewed the seven-day ultimatum
given to striking university lecturers to resume today or be sacked as
it now gave them till Monday, December 9. This came as
most members of
the Academic Staff Union of Universities remained adamant and vowed to
continue with the strike until their demands were met.
ASUU
president, Dr. Nasir Issa Fagge has also assured that once the
government opens the bank account with N200 billion as requested by the
union, the strike would be suspended.
Asuu-cartoon
Supervising
Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, who announced the shift in the date
for the compulsory resumption of Federal Universities to Monday,
December 9, said it was as a mark of respect for the former National
President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, Professor
Festus Iyayi, who died in an auto accident on his way to a National
Executive Committee meeting of ASUU.
Speaking in Abuja,
yesterday, Mr Wike said that the family of the late Professor Iyayi
officially informed the ministry of the burial rites for the late ASUU
President through the National Universities Commission, NUC, on Monday,
hence the shift in the mandatory resumption date.
He said that the Federal Government will fully participate in the burial rites of the former ASUU President.
ate of the compulsory resumption of Federal Universities for academic
activities has been taken as a result of the respect we have for the
former ASUU President”.
Wike stated that the Federal Government
took the decision to re-open the universities in the interest of
Nigerians and not to engender any form of show-down with ASUU.
He
said Nigerians must appreciate the fact that the pro-chancellors and
chairmen of the Federal Universities Governing Councils took the
decision to re-open the schools, pointing out that the Federal
Government’s directive was to the vice-chancellors who are expected to
comply with the directive of the pro-chancellors.
The minister
also said that the Federal Government has already opened a dedicated
account for the revival of infrastructure in the universities, while the
Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education has signed the
resolution that the Federal Government will commit N1.3trillion into the
revival of infrastructure in the universities.
He stated that
despite the repeated misrepresentation of facts on the 2009 FGN-ASUU
agreement, the Federal Government had implemented over 80 per cent of
the issues contained in the document, with only the payment of earned
allowances and revitalisation of infrastructure pending.
Complying lecturers to get salary arrears
The
Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission, NUC,
Professor Julius Okojie, who briefed journalists in Abuja, yesterday,
said the Federal Government was ready to pay the four-month salary
arrears owed academic staff who returns to work.
According to him: “Councils have been directed to shift the resumption
date to December 9. The new deadline, has already been communicated to
the Pro-Chancellors Tuesday (yesterday) morning.
“The Federal
Government as an employer of labour cannot just fold its arms while the
institutions remain shut and its clients — the students — continue to
suffer.
“You cannot pay someone who has failed to resume work.
You are on strike and you want to be paid. What if some have already
left the system? Some of our very bright lecturers may have got jobs
elsewhere already.”
Okojie noted that “the resumption order does
not necessarily mean students would commence academic activities
immediately but the school environment has to be put back in shape as
reptiles may have taken over some places, and the Senate of each
institution has to revisit the academic calendar. Students would be
expected to resume one or two weeks after the December 9 resumption
deadline,”.
Okojie while responding to several issues raised by
ASUU, insisted that it was a general consensus at the November 4, 2013
meeting with the President to have the Permanent Secretary of the
Education Ministry sign the resolutions reached after the meeting.
Okojie
stressed that the issue of the inclusion of a non-victimization clause
as now demanded by ASUU did not even come up at all during and after the
meeting.
“Jega and Awuzie are past ASUU chairmen. Are they not
holding good positions in Nigeria today? Why would anyone victimize
someone for exercising his right? If anyone would do such a thing, not
the Jonathan government. In fact the mood that day did not reflect such,
we were all smiles and hugs. After that meeting we were all hopeful
that was the end of the crises,” he said.
He wondered why ASUU would return three weeks later, after it had failed to get back to government on November 8 as agreed, and demand addition of new clauses.
He
said: “The 2009 Agreement stipulates that any party that wants a
re-negotiation should inform the Ministry of Labour. If ASUU had said
they would resume, but the outstanding issues must be addressed,
government would have no choice,”.
On the N200 billion
revitalization fund which ASUU is demanding should be disbursed within
two weeks, Okojie diclosed that the money has been deposited in an
account in the Central Bank of Nigeria.
“The money cannot, however, be disbursed just anyhow because they are meant for capital projects”, he said.
Okojie again appealed to the striking union to return to work in the interest of students who he described as the victims.
“One
of the universities in Uganda where our children are enrolling,
neigbouring countries do not even accept their degrees. Our children are
going to schools with poorer degrees,” he lamented.
ASUU gives condition for strike suspension
Meanwhile,
the President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, Dr. Nasir
Issa Fagge, yesterday, gave conditions for the suspension of the six
month old strike. Fagge who spoke on Channels Television, yesterday morning, said once government opens the bank account with N200 billion, requested by the union, the strike would be suspended.
He
said “once that is done, and the committee that is supposed to disburse
the funds starts working, our members will have no reason not to
suspend the strike action”. Dr. Faggie said the union insists on
documentation.
He asked: “Why won’t government make available
this money so that we know the money is there and the universities
commence drawing from this money to address the problem of decay in
infrastructure, teaching and research facilities? When that is done, our
members will suspend the strike.”
The ASUU president dismissed
insinuations in some quarters that the union had been split. On
suggestions in some government quarters that ASUU was being influenced
by opposition parties, Dr. Fagge said “ASUU is a union of cerebral
intellectuals”. He said the union is not influenced by religion, or
ethnicity, saying however that members of the union are free to
associate with any political party of their choice.
UNICAL resumes today
The
University of Calabar has announced that the university resumes today
for academic activities and directed all students who did not finish
their registration to do so immediately.
But Chairman of Academic
Staff Union of Universities, Unical chapter, Dr. James Ekprinya has
warned parents that the university is still on strike and that any one
that releases his ward is doing that at his peril.
The university
in a press release by the Deputy Registrar, Academic division, Mr. Mike
Monity stated that, “Normal Academic/Allied activities will resume
tomorrow, the December 4, 2013 at the University of Calabar.
Monity in a release said the resumption was the decision reached at an
emergency meeting of senate held at the senate chambers of the
Institution.
It further stated that “the decision is in
compliance with the directive issued by the Minister of Education” and
that details of the revised university calendar would be disclosed in
due course.
It also advised students with pending activities like
second semester registration, Final year and Post Graduate research
projects to start immediately as the school works out time table for
lectures.
The ASUU chairman, Dr. Ekpirinya said that the congress
rose from its congress with “a strong resolve to continue the strike
until the agreements are implemented to the letter.
“We did not
close school, we will not re-open it. We warn parents that any one who
decides to send his or her ward to school is doing so at his or her
peril.”
Iyayi: UNIBEN ASUU vows to continue strike
University
of Benin chapter of ASUU, yesterday, vowed to continue the current
strike action and admonished President Goodluck Jonathan to embrace
dialogue with the union rather than threats.
Meanwhile, no sign of resumption of academi
According to a statement by the minister’s Special Assistant, Simeon Nwakaudu: “The decision to shift the d
No comments:
Post a Comment