Pledges
quick resolution of crisis
• Union
cautions against politicising strike
•Senate
urges teachers to resume work
The Federal
Government has admitted that the failure on its part in the negotiations with
the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) resulted in the ongoing
indefinite strike.Briefing State House correspondents after the Federal
Executive Council (FEC) meeting presided over by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo
yesterday, Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu said government failed on its
part of the bargain, a development which made the strike by the university
teachers inevitable.
“Very sad that
I am here and ASUU is on strike. Late last year, we had a meeting because ASUU
gave one week notice of strike and we were able to work out some agreement. I
must confess government has not fulfilled its part of the bargain,” the
minister said.
Adamu,
however, disclosed that efforts were being made by the government to negotiate
with the teachers and work out modalities on how the strike could be called off
as soon as possible.
“Even though
we are unhappy that ASUU went on this strike without following due process and
giving us good notice, the lecturers took the decision to declare the strike
after deliberations at its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting held at the
University of Abuja last weekend.”
In a
document titled: “Strike Bulletin No.1”, which was signed and issued by, ASUU
President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi said the strike was to be total and indefinite
whereby no form of academic activities, including teaching, attendance of any
meeting, conduct and supervision of any examination at any level, supervision
of project or thesis at any level should take place at any of the nation’s
universities.
While
assuring ASUU on the issue of Earned Allowances, the minister explained that
“there were communication differences which stalled the earned allowances.
“They have been paid N30billion, the problem actually arose because they were
not able to account for the N30billion and we said we would only give them the
balance if they were able to account for it and the balance is N23billion, the
total is N53 billion and government has the money to pay.”
Adamu said:
“I will be meeting them later today (Wednesday) or tomorrow (today, Thursday)
and I am sure we will be able to reach some agreement so that the strike will
be called off as soon as possible.“I am sure you are aware of the issues we
agreed on, there is re-negotiation which is the only one on which they agreed
government has done what it promised because we set up the re-negotiation team
and negotiation is already ongoing.”
On the issue
of registration for Nigerian Universities Pension Commission, the minister who
was joined by his counterpart in Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, said
there were a few issues that needed to be sorted out with the commission, just
as he assured “there will be no problem with that.”
“The issue
of their staff school, I think the court has given them verdict to go ahead
with it. They have requested that they should be allowed to stay off the
Treasury Single Account (TSA) and I think government will not do this, but
there are some peculiar funds in the university, like endowment, which are
monies kept and all the interest they generate, prices and so on are given.
“Government
will exempt that one only, but it is part of the peculiarities, they just must
log on. I hope later on, when I meet them there will be total agreement,” he
said.Asked to reconcile his earlier statement during the last dispensation
about ASUU strike, Adamu said: “Instead of hectoring ASUU to call off its
strike, the nation should be praying for more of its kind in other sectors of
the economy.”
According to
him, if ASUU had not forced former President Goodluck Jonathan, he would not
have created the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), without which he
said, the university system would have collapsed.
“That is
still my view. I believe ASUU is composed of patriotic people, very
responsible. If I can look at what their struggle is, they forced the then
government to create TETFund and today, without TETFund, the university system
would have collapsed. I’m not supporting ASUU, I am supporting what is good. If
it is something bad, I will condemn it.”
ASUU
yesterday cautioned the Federal Government and political office holders against
politicising the strike, saying there was nothing political in asking for a
full implementation of the 2009 agreement and 2013 Memorandum of Understanding
(MoU).The union reacting through the Chairman, University of Ibadan Chapter,
Dr. Deji Omole, to the comments made by a member of the House of Representatives,
Johnson Agbonayinma (Edo-PDP), lashed out at the lawmaker for displaying
shallow knowledge and playing politics with the lives of children of the masses
and the future of the country.
Omole also
accused the National Assembly of conspiring with the executive to further
reduce allocation to education to six per cent in the 2017 budget while
pretending to love Nigerian children.Agbonayinma was quoted by a news agency to
have said that the strike was a deliberate plot to disrupt President Muhammadu
Buhari’s return.
Omole asked
Nigerian leaders to demonstrate the love they have for Nigeria by withdrawing
their children in private universities both in Nigeria and abroad and stop
health tourism by using the health facilities they provide for Nigerians.The
ASUU boss said they were surprised that the Chairman of the Federal Government
negotiation team was also losing sight of realities that there is a difference
between implementation of agreement already signed and renegotiation of the
agreement.
Meanwhile,
the Ebonyi State University and the Benue State University (BSU) have joined
the strike. This happened as the Unified Nigerian Youth Forum, UNYF questioned
the intellectual reliability of ASUU leadership, saying that ineffectiveness of
the union on policy and decision making has always led to continuous strike.
The youth
forum said there was a need for ASUU to set up a think-tank team to proffer
more effective alternatives to their continuous demand instead of embarking on
strike every now and then.A statement by its President, Abdulsalam Muhammad
Kazeem, called on government to, as a matter of urgency, declare a state of
emergency in the education sector.
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