Strike looms in varsities as FG fails April deadline agreement with unions// SAD NEWS FOR STUDENTS
Strike looms in varsities as FG fails April
deadline agreement with unions
—SSANU leadership under pressure to declare a strike By Johnbosco
Agbakwuru, ABUJA INDICATION emerged on Sunday that the non-teaching staff in
the universities are mounting pressure on their leadership to declare
industrial dispute following the alleged Federal Government failure to keep to
the April timeline for the implementation of the Memorandum of Action, MoA it
entered with the unions. The union members have lamented that after about 14
months the Consequential Adjustment for the new minimum wage came into effect,
the government was yet to start its implementation.
But Vanguard reliably gathered that the Minister of Labour and
Employment, Senator Chris Ngige has promised to intervene in order to avert the
looming strike. Speaking to journalists at the weekend, the President of the
Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities, SSANU, Comrade Mohammed
Haruna Ibrahim confirmed the pressure from his members to resume strike.
According to him, “We met with government some few months ago and we had an
understanding after going on strike for three weeks. A lot of pressure was put
on us; a lot of persuasions and we talked with the government and saw the
reason to suspend the strike because the government tried to paint the picture
of being sincere and we needed to give them an opportunity to do one or two
things to ensure that our demands are met.
“As you are aware, our demands are not new demands. These are things
that have been lingering for eleven years. We had an agreement with the
government in 2009 and till today, a lot of such issues are still lagging
behind; especially things that involve some payments of our allowances. “We saw
reasons to suspend because we felt the government was sincere and the timelines
given by government – not us was that by end of April most of these issues will
be sorted. We still believe a miracle can happen. “Outside that a lot of our
members are agitated, we are under a lot of pressure to go back to the trenches
because even when we called our members to interact with them with pressed on
them to give the government a chance. “We are hoping that government will not
disappoint us and paint us like liars before our members. Where the government
doesn’t meet the timeline one cannot guarantee industrial peace because we have
been taken for a ride for too long. “Out of the seven issues we tabled before
government three or four have been handled. For example the issue of the
visitation panel: currently the panels are all over the universities. The issue
of discrepancies in our salaries is also being handled by the IPPIS committee.
“But payment of the consequential adjustments for the new national minimum wage
and the allowances that are encapsulated in our agreements contained in the
earned allowance; these are still things that are lagging behind and there is
no end in sight, to say the least. “While the government has attempted to
address some of the problems the ones that touch us directly- the ones that
involve our pockets have not been addressed. Because of the insecurity inflation
has skyrocketed. The prices of items have changed. Our members the little they
get as salaries cannot even take them home. By the time you make a few
purchases money is gone. “We are pleading with the government to ensure that
they don’t embarrass us as elders in our different unions, that all those
agreements we have reached with them which they promise that they will see the
light of day by the end of April come to see the light of the day but where it
doesn’t, out hands are also tied as leaders.
“We never called off the
strike, we only suspended it meaning that our notice is still with the
government but by the expiration of this Memorandum of Action, all we need do
is to call our people and inform them that government has failed us and they
will tell us the next line of action to take. “For us, in SSANU we are not
struck mongers, we believe in engagements. Even when we went on strike it
lasted for three weeks and because we believe that things can be done
differently but where we are pushed to the wall we may have no reason other
than to react. “As I told you some of the issues we have with government – all
the non-monetary aspect are being handled. Clearly, we have seen it but where
it concerns giving out money to members who are paying their dues by working is
where the government is reneging. “For example, the payment of the
consequential adjustment, the implementation of the EA in our salaries – these
are the areas government is still lagging behind and the issue of
non-remittance of pension deductions. Our members who have retired cannot
access their money that has been collected on their behalf and lodged in the
PFAs. This is a very pathetic situation. “These are the areas government is
still lagging behind and they have promised that we should give them up to the
end of April by which time the consequential adjustments would have been paid,
the EA would have been implemented alongside our salaries that are paid
monthly. These are the areas we are still having issues with the government.”
It was reliably gathered that the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator
Ngige has promised to wade into the matter to ensure that it didn’t lead to a
strike.
Nigeria news paper
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