“We’ll suspend strike if FG pays salaries, complete negotiations” — ASUU
“We’ll suspend strike
if FG pays salaries, complete negotiations” — ASUU
Ola Ajayi – Ibadan As the strike
embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities enters the seventh
month, the lecturers have said it will suspend it if the Federal Government
pays their withheld salaries and completes the negotiations of what led to the
strike.
The union accused the government of trying to use hunger, a weapon of war to
suppress its members. This was disclosed by the Union’s zonal coordinator, Prof
Ade Adejumo when speaking with newsmen in the University of Ibadan on
Wednesday. Prof Adejumo was flanked by Professor Moyo Ajao, Professor Ayo
Akinwole, Ibadan, Dr Femi Abanikannda from the University of Osun, Dr Dauda
Adesola from Kwara State, and Prof Olusiji Showande from Lagos State.
He said, “We are ready to suspend
the strike if the government pays our withheld salaries and completes the
negotiations that led to the strike. Our children too are tired of staying at
home but we cannot work on empty stomachs while politicians’ homes and
warehouses are filled with palliative materials that they don’t even need”.
ASUU further accused the Federal Government of trying to make its members
commit suicide vowing that it will remain resolute until the current decaying
educational system is improved upon. Despite a long time, it granted the
government to see reasons, it lamented that government did not utilise it.
“Government using hunger to suppress us” “Rather than for Government to utilize
the opportunity of the lockdown to address our grievances, it was during that
lockdown that our salaries were stopped so that our members could die of hunger
in their various homes”. “It took a high level of intervention before our
members were paid amputated salaries for three months after which Government
resorted to blackmail by whipping sentiments against us while taking our
members as enemies deserving of starvation.”
“The intellectuals are citizens, not enemies but Government appears to have declared war on us using the weapon used during the war against adversaries: hunger.” “Some people have been wondering why ASUU is on strike again. The simple answer is that ASUU is on strike because of the survival of the university system where many of us still have our children as students since we cannot afford sponsoring our children abroad with our measly salaries as politicians do”. “ASUU is on strike in order to restore the past glory of public universities and address the infrastructural decay and deficit in our institutions. ASUU is on strike for the legitimate dues of its members who are the least paid in the tertiary education sub-sector. For the sake of emphasis, the truth that will shock many Nigerians, which is available for verification, is that Chief Lecturers in some tertiary institutions, who are not required to supervise postgraduate students or conduct research, earn more than professors in our lopsided education system.” To the union, there is nothing new ASUU is demanding from the politicians in government than for them to honour their own agreements with the union. “ASUU is actually tired of having a circus show of talks but in the interest of the students and the Nigerians at large, we still continue to hold meetings upon meetings while the government continues to shift the goal post and dribble the union as it wishes”. It recalled how the government agreed to inject funds to revitalize our universities in 2019 and nothing has been done about it till this moment. “The government agreed to do its own obligation of constituting visitation panels to the universities to check their records between April and May 2019 but it has failed to do so. We have the issue of our Earned Academic Allowances which the Government agreed to pay in two tranches in November 2019 and July 2020 is still there”. “Then, we are still waiting for the renegotiation of our 2009 Agreement that comprehensively addresses all the issues at stake. All that we have before us are words without actions and as our people say, ordinary words do not fill the basket.
” The union corroborated the earlier
stance of its President, Comrade Biodun Ogunyemi, that the issue of the
Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) is a distraction to
the union. “Apart from IPPIS being a cesspool of corruption as many Nigerians
who are at its receiving end have attested to, there is no serious-minded
country in the world where university lecturers and intellectual assets of the
country are lumped together in payment with the civil service. We raised this
point of order when the system was introduced and there was a joint team
constituted to work things out.” Instead of making the committee work,
“Government suddenly hibernated only to wake up and attempt to railroad us into
the IPPIS slavery, as if its life depends on it, without any consideration for
its own agreement”. “The alternative University Transparency and Accountability
Solution (UTAS) that we developed, and which has been successfully demonstrated
at least three times to the satisfaction government, is still being subjected
to an unending process of integrity tests. We are being played around like ping
pong as Government keeps approbating and reprobating at the same time”. ASUU
wonders why it is so difficult for the government in being law-abiding.
“By all intents and purposes, IPPIS
is a violation of the Universities (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2003 (also
known as the Universities Autonomy Act No 1 2007 (as amended)) which the
National Assembly signed into law on July 30, 2003, and subsequently gazetted
by the Federal Republic of Nigeria Official Gazette Number 10, Volume 94 of
January 12, 2007”. “Why would the government violate its own law of vesting the
power of hiring, paying and firing university staff in the Governing Councils
without repealing the law? It is high time we joined hands to end government
impunity. Without impunity on the part of the government, there will be no brutality
in the rank and file of SARS.” It called the attention of Nigerians and the
international community noting that despite the ongoing negotiations, the
government has refused to pay their salaries and allowances. “It has also
callously withheld the check-off dues of some of our members, who were
selectively paid amputated salaries, in order to starve the union of the energy
needed to sustain the negotiations.” It urged Nigerians to compel the
government to release the withheld salaries of its members, remit the check-off
dues of the union to the rightful owner, pay them the same way it had “paid our
arbitrarily handpicked members without subjecting them to IPPIS registration
and speed up the process of testing the integrity of UTAS so that it may be deployed
for payment beginning from January 2021”.
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