The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) on Sunday alleged threat to the lives of its leaders nationwide.
The four-month old strike embarked upon by members of the union took a
new dimension when ASUU alleged that members had been under the siege
of security agencies nationwide.
It was learnt on Sunday that security agencies were beaming
searchlights on the sources of finance of members of the union
nationwide despite the stoppage of their salaries by the federal
government.
Investigations at the University of Ibadan showed that ASUU
executives at the institution went underground shortly after last
Thursday Congress held at the institution while phones were switched
off.
Similarly the secretariat of the union has been deserted with new security arrangement being put in place.
In a statement issued on the latest development, the chairman of the
University of Ibadan chapter of the union, Dr Olusegun Ajiboye, said
“ASUU strike: Union leaders go underground.”
The ASUU leader alleged that he had received some calls warning him about his role in the ongoing strike.
Ajiboye who called on the Inspector General of Police to save the
lives of ASUU leaders nationwide said no amount of threat or clampdown
on the union will make them back down from the strike until public
education is saved from collapse.
According to him, this recent security threat has forced many ASUU
leaders to go underground alleging that many of their phone numbers have
been bugged.
“Apart from the issue of finance, ASUU leaders are now being trailed
all over the place. A majority of the our union leaders have now gone
underground while many have their telephone lines bugged. Some are now
living in fear of their lives”
Ajiboye who noted that ASUU members are not security threat to the
nation added that as a democratic nation, citizens are guaranteed
freedom of association.
Ajiboye urged the federal government to leave its leaders alone and
implement the agreements it reached with the union for normalcy to
return to university campuses nationwide.
“The position of ASUU is that Nigeria is a democratic country and
citizens are guaranteed freedom of association. Members of the union are
apprehensive for the lives of their leaders.
“We urge the government to leave our leaders alone. Our leaders are
our servants, we are their principals, they report to us on all
matters”.
Representatives of the union have repeatedly stated that the strike
action would only be called off when the FGN/ASUU 2009 agreement is
implemented by the government.
The strike, which started 105 days ago, has seen many meetings
between the federal government and representatives of ASUU end in
deadlocks with ASUU rejecting an offer of N30bn to begin payment of the
earned allowance owed to university lecturers.
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