• Warns UNILORIN against sharing N986.7m allowance
• NUEE may join strike
• NASU, others threaten to shut down UNN
THE
Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yesterday said it was wrong
for the Federal Government to claim that opponents of the government
have hijacked its industrial action.
Meanwhile, there are signals
that whenever the ASUU strike comes to an end, a fresh crisis may erupt
at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) as the Joint Action Committee
on Trade Unions of the university yesterday threatened to shut down the
institution as soon as academic activities resume.
ASUU has
dashed all hope for a quick resumption of academic activities in public
universities, as it vowed not to succumb to attempt by the Federal
Government to blackmail it to calling off the over three months
industrial action.
The union’s chairman in the University of Port
Harcourt, Prof. Antonia Okerengwo, told journalists yesterday in Port
Harcourt that the Federal Government has been economical with the
details of the reasons Nigerian public university teachers have been on
strike in the last three months and that it is wrong to use ASUU to
fight a political war.
Okerengwo said it was rather wrong for
President Goodluck Jonathan to claim that those with political vendetta
against the government have hijacked ASUU’s struggle, adding that it was
sad that the government has allegedly decided to reduce the struggle to
politicking.
“When I listened to the president saying that, I
sent a message to somebody and said it is the government that is being
political, we know our politicians, once something is not going their
way, they explain it to mean their enemies are using it for political
reasons, is this the first time ASUU is going on strike? We have been on
strike for the same issues all along. Did we also play politics during
Babangida’s time, during the military era in 1992 when we went on
strike? Did we also play politics when Abacha was head of state and we
went on strike, was it also political?” she stated.
She spoke as
the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE) gave the Federal
Government one week to settle its differences with ASUU or face the
mother of all strikes that may cripple the country if nothing is done.
Also,
ASUU has warned the authorities of the University of Ilorin not to
share the N986.7 million earned allowance disbursed to it by the Federal
Government until the ongoing strike is over.
Zonal Coordinator of
ASUU, Dr. Ayan Adeleke, told reporters in Ibadan that the union
chairman in UNILORIN, Dr. Taiwo Oloruntoba-Oju had already conveyed the
position of the university teachers to the institution’s management,
warning that universities should not betray the struggle by disbursing
the earned allowances until the struggle is over.
It was gathered
that workers in the University of Ilorin early yesterday engaged
themselves and the university management over modalities for sharing of
the institution’s share of the N30 billion disbursed to the universities
by the Federal Government.
Dr. Adeleke, who faulted the Professor
Wahab Egbewole faction of the union in UNILORIN, reminded that the
National Industrial Court had declared the group illegal.
University
of Ibadan ASUU Chairman, Dr. Segun Ajiboye, said, “it is the height of
immorality for these fellows in Ilorin to be squabbling over the
proceeds of a struggle that they did not participate in”, adding that
the union is committed to full revitalization of the public university
system and not the peanut of earned allowances.
Speaking
during a training workshop organized for labour leaders of the union in
Enugu, General Secretary of the National Union of Electricity Employees
(NUEE), Comrade Joe Ajaero said the union would align with others
across the country to embark on a solidarity strike with ASUU if the
impasse persists.
In University of Nigeria, Nsukka, the ASUU and
NASU at a press conference said the plan to shut down the institution
has become necessary following alleged ongoing corruption, looting and
flagrant abuse of office by the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Barth Okolo.
The
two unions alleged that Okolo had run the institution since he assumed
office without a budget. They called on the Federal Government to
constitute a judicial commission of enquiry to investigate the
activities of the vice chancellor and the immediate past council of the
school with a view to sanitizing the system.
When contacted, Okolo
said the issues raised by the unions were “instigated” and calculated
at tarnishing his achievements in office, adding that they had no
relationship with the goings on in the school.
Okolo, who would
not want to respond pointedly to the issues raised by the unions added:
“The type of growth that has happened in the UNN presently has never
happened anywhere since the inception of the institution. It is being
testified everywhere and I am yet to believe that it is all the members
of the unions that addressed the press conference.”
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