Tag: Asuu strike

  • NANS will hit the street to protest ASUU strike-President Asefon

    NANS will hit the street to protest ASUU strike-President Asefon

    National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), president Sunday Asefon, yesterday said the union was battle ready to storm the streets to protest the strike embarked on by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) since February 2022.

    Asefon, who spoke during an interview with Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily and monitored by TheNewsGuru.com lamented that the Federal Government appeared not to be interested in ending the strike, as it was focusing on the coming 2023 general election.

    He appealed to the Federal Government to find a lasting solution to the crisis rocking ASUU and the Academics in permanently.

    He urged the government to stop playing politics with the ASUU issue and resolve the prolonged strike.

    “Our lives are no longer being discussed by the leaders, these leaders that we elected. Rather, their focus now is on election because of their selfish interest.

    “We are battle ready; the worst they can do is to shoot us. If they ask their police to shoot us, if we die, the generation coming will know we died because of fighting for them. They will also know that they shot us because they were preparing for election. We need to take action now.”

  • Why I chose to study at Unilag – Rema

    Why I chose to study at Unilag – Rema

    Sensational singer, Divine Ikubor, popularly known as Rema, has disclosed why he chose to study at University of Lagos.

     

    Recall that the legendary singer revealed that he gained admission into the University of Lagos some months ago.

     

    Rema revealed why he had chosen to study here in Nigeria; according to him, regardless of his career in the music industry, he still lives here in Nigeria.

     

    When asked the motive behind his decision, he said, “because I live here mostly; in Lagos.”

     

    With the whole public university on strike for months now, the singer had taken to his social media page last week, to beg ASUU to call off it’s prolonged strike.

     

    “Since them give me admission, I never start school o” – Rema cries out as he begs ASUU to call off strike

  • Why can’t FG take N200bn from N4trn budgeted for fuel subsidy to end Universities lecturers strike – ASUU

    Why can’t FG take N200bn from N4trn budgeted for fuel subsidy to end Universities lecturers strike – ASUU

    The President, Academic Staff Union of University, Prof Emmanuel Osodeke, has wondered why the Federal Government could not take N200bn from the N4trillion budgeted for fuel subsidy to put an end to the industrial action.

     

    Speaking on Wednesday, Osodeke said, “It is always funny that the government cannot raise N200bn to revamp all Nigeria’s universities annually, to world standards. The same government can raise N4trillion for fuel subsidy.

     

    “You can raise a budget to make N4trillion for subsidy in a year, but you cannot raise N200bn to fund your education where you don’t have the infrastructure. You can spend N228bn to feed children in primary or secondary schools but you cannot raise this fund for your university; it is an issue of priority. That is the problem.

     

    “If you remove N200bn from N4trillion to fund your universities, you still have N3.8trillion for fuel subsidy. We don’t believe there is a fuel subsidy. There is no country where you have the crude intelligentsia.

     

    “You have been importing fuel for the past 20 years; something is ongoing. No country in the world will do that. In the 60s, we built four refineries, and between 1999 and now, we cannot build one or service the ones we had.”

     

  • STRIKE: ASUU warns FG not to be misdirected by NITDA officers

    STRIKE: ASUU warns FG not to be misdirected by NITDA officers

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities, Lagos Zone, has warned the Federal Government not to allow itself to be misinformed and misdirected through the officers of the National Information Technology Development Agency, NITDA, in order to end the ongoing strike.

     

    ASUU noted that the rejection of University Transparency and Accountability Solution, UTAS, by NITDA will continue to elongate the strike action.

     

    The union declared that the strike would not be suspended until the government addresses the adoption of UTAS, implements the renegotiated agreement, and pays all outstanding allowances.

     

    Speaking at a press briefing held at the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, on Tuesday, the coordinator of ASUU Lagos Zone, Adelaja Odukoya, insisted that the UTAS proposed by the union passed the test and quality assurance requirements, having scored 99.3 per cent.

     

    Odukoya described the rejection as an attempt to play politics with the public universities.

     

    He maintained that the statement of the NITDA discrediting the union’s efforts on the University Transparency and Accountability Solution is false and a deliberate attempt to misinform the public.

     

    He called on Nigerians to join the union in the fight to meet their demands.

     

    He said, “We, however, wish to draw the attention of all concerned to the deliberate misinformation and disinformation of the public by the National Information Technology and Development Agency on the state of the integrity test and adoption of the University Transparency and Accountability Solution by the government.

     

    “The utterances of the NITDA spokesperson are capable of deliberate elongation of the ongoing strike action, suppose the government allows itself to be misinformed and misdirected through the managerial incompetence of the NITDA officers. In that case, our union considers it the peak of insensitivity to the plight of the universities, including staff, students, and indeed the country.

     

    “Nonetheless, it is the considered opinion of our union that we owe the Nigerian people the onerous responsibility of providing the truth in discharging our patriotic duty as Nigerian Academic and the intellectual conscience of the Nigerian state.

     

    “ASUU, therefore, wants the Nigerian public to call the DG, NITDA to order on the point of integrity not to play politics and vendetta with the future of Nigeria and that of our public universities as National treasures and collective patrimony of all Nigerian citizens. We are convinced that the DG of NITDA is only out to carry out the hatchet job of a Minister whose professional fraud was challenged by our union.

     

    “ASUU wants to inform you that the current strike action will not be suspended until the government addresses the adoption of UTAS, implement the renegotiated agreement, pay all outstanding allowances without prejudice to the donation of $1 million to Afghanistan and fulfill all other issues contained in the Memorandum of Action signed with our Union.”

  • Ngige advises ASUU to picket Federal Ministry of Education for their demands to be met

    Ngige advises ASUU to picket Federal Ministry of Education for their demands to be met

    Labour and Employment Minister, Chris Ngige, has advised the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to picket the Federal Ministry of Education than embarking on strike, for their demands to be met.

     

    ASUU had said there would be no resumption in public universities until the re-negotiated 2009 agreement is signed, implemented and the University Transparency and Accountability Solution (UTAS) deployed.

     

    In his words: “I am not the Minister of Education. I cannot go to the Education Minister and dictate to him how to run his place. But I told ASUU that they should be bombarding the Federal Ministry of Education for this to be moved forward.

     

    “There are many ways to do so. If you go to the Labour Act, there is something called picketing. You can picket. A strike is an ultimate thing. Picketing means that you can stay in the corridor, clapping or singing. Workers are permitted to do so. But I am tired that every time there is a disagreement, it is a strike.

     

    “And the bosses in the Federal Ministry of Education don’t feel the strike. It is the children and some of us, as parents that have our children in public schools.”

     

    The minister gave this advice in a statement on Monday, in Abuja, by the Head of Press and Public Relations, Patience Onuobia, after a meeting with members of the government’s team on the 2009 Federal Government/University-based Unions’ Agreement Renegotiation Committee, led by its Chairman, Prof. Nimi Briggs.

     

    The statement in parts read: “I started pushing to see that things were done. What the Munzali Committee came up with is a proposal. Both Munzali and ASUU did not sign. At our last meeting in February, before ASUU proceeded on strike, we said everyone should go back to his principal.

     

    “I asked the Education Minister several times what they had done with the document. We later got information on areas of disagreement. There is nothing wrong with that. It is bound to happen. I told ASUU to put up a committee; they said the Munzali Committee had expired.

     

    “As a conciliator, I have to make use of the labour instruments at my disposal. The bosses in the Federal Ministry of Education do not feel the strike. There are things that are above me.”

     

    The minister said the Federal Government remained committed to the renegotiation of the conditions of service for all workers in public universities across the country.

     

    Ngige said the Nigerian university system produced him and he remained proud of it.

     

    “When we went to universities here, I knew the course content and as a medical doctor, the doctors we trained here are better than the ones trained abroad. That is one of the counsels I gave to my children. You can do your first degree. One got admission in Ghana, I said no. Others got in Canada and the UK, but I refused.

     

    “If anybody is interested in the welfare of workers in Nigerian universities, I am number one. I told my colleagues that what university professors showed us here as their salaries is unacceptable,” he said.

     

    Prof. Briggs, who is also the Pro-Chancellor of the Alex Ekwueme Federal University, Ndifu Alike, Ebonyi State, said the re-negotiation committee was consulting with all stakeholders with a view to finding a lasting solution to issues in dispute.

  • FG berates ASUU over strike

    FG berates ASUU over strike

    “You are being mean. There is no point in disrupting everybody’s life because you have not got your money,” said the Minister of State for Education, Mr Emeka Nwajiuba, to Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) over ongoing strike.

     

    He stated his position on the ASUU strike in an interview, explaining that the government had no money to fund the union’s requests at a go as the sale of petroleum had dropped drastically in the country.

     

    He wondered if the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) and the Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) could bear with the Federal Government over non meeting to their demands, why would ASUU not do likewise.

     

    Nwajiuba said it is selfish for the ASUU to shut down the universities since they are not the only ones that have demands.

     

    Berating ASUU, Nwajiuba stated, “The issue is not whether they are right or wrong.

     

    “What we’ve consistently said is government and the people of Nigeria will continue to look into the matter because if you disrupt academic sessions because of one entitlement, you would eventually get the entitlement, but we would have lost the time our children would have used in learning.”

     

    “The 2.2 million children we have in tertiary institutions who are in the universities and other tertiary institutions, and the nearly 100,000 lecturers, that work with them are a very important segment of our workforce.

     

    “But then, they are not the only people in Nigeria. There are unionists in so many different parts. All we manage to sell after banditry attacks is just less than 1,000 barrels of oil in a day. When the money comes in, it is that money we are going to use to pay the police, Man O’ War, and all the civil defence groups and other organisations in Nigeria.

     

    “It is that same money we are going to use in paying secondary school teachers. To build infrastructure, the government just goes around begging China, begging this, begging that. But to pay salary, we have to sell this little crude oil in order to keep the lives of 200-so million lives running.

     

    “You can see what the Ministry of Finance is doing. It gave N50bn, N20bn. We don’t have N200bn in the coffers at a go. When the last President (Goodluck Jonathan) signed the agreement, he thought he might have the money. The government can’t be managed like that: The government will not be robbing Peter to pay Paul.”

     

    The minister also defended the decision of the Federal Government to establish more universities, saying it was part of efforts to increase access to university education.

     

    He stated, “What we have done is to at least expand access. And while we are using the resources that are available to us to improve human capacity to be able to run because those are the two things needed; buildings are not the universities. It is content that makes the universities. So as long as we keep developing human capacity around them, we will ensure we give access to our people in millions.”

     

    According to him, government licensed 20 universities last year; another 12 this year.

     

    “It is our belief that Nigeria is still below 250 universities for 250 million people,” he added.

     

    He said no fewer than 1.5 million candidates write Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination every year, out of which only 600,000 are admitted.

     

    Nwajiuba, also, took a swipe at the Joint Action Committee of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities and the Non-Academic Staff Union of Education and Associated Institutions for also going on strike.

     

    Two weeks ago, SSANU and NASU began a two-week warning strike.

     

    Among others, JAC is demanding payment of earned allowances. It also faulted the usurpation of non-academic career positions by vice-chancellors.

     

    JAC on Friday also extended its strike by another two weeks. ASUU, which began its strike on February 14, accused the government of poor commitment to the payment of the academic earned allowance, among others.

     

    According to Nwajiuba, there was no point in the unions disrupting the lives of students because of money that they would eventually be paid.

     

    The minister stated that the workers were still receiving their salaries despite their refusal to call off the strikes.

     

    While reacting to Nwajiuba’s allegations, National President- ASUU, Prof Emmanuel Osodeke, faulted the claim that the government had no money.

     

    He stated, “They (government) have money to pay him all his allowances. They have money to feed students for the so-called N250bn a year and I have not seen students who said they were fed. They have money to construct the second runway of the presidential wing of the airport but they don’t have money for education.

     

    “Nigeria has money to be used to pay school fees every year in foreign countries but we don’t have N200bn to use in our country.

     

    “Tell him if that is what he wants, they should close all the universities, till when money comes.”

     

    Osodeke added that the plan of the government and the elite was to devalue the government tertiary institutions so that every Nigerian would be forced to attend private institutions.

     

    He emphasised that the government could afford to turn a deaf ear to the unions’ requests because politicians’ children were not schooling in Nigeria.

     

    “Do we still have public primary and secondary education? They have killed them. That is what they want to do to universities. If we give up this fight, you will be surprised that in the next two years, Nwajiuba will have a university.”

     

    “Their children are not in this country and they have nothing at stake. They are not interested. If they have their children in this country, they will not tell you there is no money for education.”

  • OAU extends mid-semester break by 4 weeks

    OAU extends mid-semester break by 4 weeks

    The management of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife has extended its mid-semester break by four weeks.

    This was disclosed in a statement signed by the Registrar and Secretary to council, Mrs. M. I. Omosule, on Thursday.

    Omosule stated that the decision of the management was based on the industrial action embarked upon by various unions within the Nigerian University system.

    The statement reads, “With full realisation of the import and impact of the various Unions within the Nigerian university system, the University Management has decided to elongate the mid-semester break by four (4) weeks.

    Students are therefore directed to continue the mid-semester break for four (4) weeks beginning from Monday, 11th April, 2022.

    We wish our esteemed students a productive and more refreshing break”

  • LAUTECH students give lecturers 3 days ultimatum  to return back to classroom

    LAUTECH students give lecturers 3 days ultimatum to return back to classroom

    Ladoke Akintola University of Technology student union government has given their lecturers 3 days to opt out of the ongoing ASUU strike.

    ASUU had, on February 14, embarked on a four-week warning strike over the failure of the Federal Government to honour the 2009 agreements it reached with the union and the rot in universities. The union also extended the strike action by another eight weeks on March 14.

    LAUTECH student union president Anuoluwa Adeboye and Public Relations Officer, Gabriel Michael mentioned that the institution had suffered a lot of setbacks as a result of the previous peculiar strikes embarked upon by the institution.

    They added that the ongoing strike had also made the fresh graduates of the school to miss being mobilized for the National Youth Service Corps orientation programme in March.

    The SUG has said that they had written to ASUU chapter of the institution for a dialogue as to reasons LAUTECH cant afford to embark on another strike but it fell on deaf ears.

    They added that many LAUTECH graduate have missed posting of NYSC simply becauseof incessant strike that have crippled activities of the institution.

    The statement read, “In light of this, if by now the leadership of ASUU LAUTECH can’t honour the open dialogue address from the Student Union between ASUU LAUTECH and LAUTECH students and they are claiming they are fighting for the Ladokites’ interest at the federal level, we are saying it is enough.

    “We are giving the leadership of ASUU LAUTECH 72 hours to borrow a leaf from ASUU KWASU that wrote a special letter to the national ASUU based on the peculiarity of their institution and to opt out of this ongoing strike or else the Student Union will be left with no choice other than to see ASUU LAUTECH as a sabotage to the progress of LAUTECH and Ladokites due to their selfish interest.

  • Pro-Chancellors ask  ASUU to shelve strike

    Pro-Chancellors ask ASUU to shelve strike

    The Chairman, Committee of Pro-Chancellors of State-owned Universities in Nigeria, Mallam Yusuf Alli, SAN has urged the Academic Staff Union of Universities to shelve the ongoing strike by the union.

    Alli made the plea in an interview with our correspondent in Abuja

    According to the PUNCH ASUU on Monday, February 14, declared a total and comprehensive four-week strike over the failure of the Federal Government to honor the lingering demands of the union.

    The strike was declared at a press conference addressed by the President of ASUU, Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke. Osodeke explained that the union tried to avoid the strike but the Federal Government is unresponsive to the union’s demands.

    The union stated that the demands of the lecturers’ union have barely changed since the signing of the ASUU/FG 2009 agreement.

    According to the union, these demands include the sustainability of the university autonomy, which the introduction of the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System for the payment of its emoluments violates. The union seeks its replacement with its own University Transparency and Accountability Solution.

    Other demands include the endorsement of the renegotiated 2009 ASUU-FGN agreement, which it said was concluded in May 2021; release of the reports of visitation panels to federal universities, and distortions in salary payment challenges.

    https://punchng.com/shelve-warning-strike-pro-chancellors-tells-asuu/

    ASUU had also demanded adequate funding for the revitalisation of public universities, earned academic allowance, improved funding of state universities, and promotion arrears.

    Speaking to our correspondent in Abuja, Ali explained that a strike at this point may lead to a collapse in the nation’s education sector.

    “When two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers, the people who are at the receiving end of these agreements are the children of the poor who have nowhere to go. Most of the people involved in the signing of the agreements have their children in schools where there are no strikes.

    “We should know that Universities in Nigeria now are facing many challenges. We have the problem of shortage of lecturers, school facilities are not upgraded among others, a strike now may lead to the collapse of the education system. We plead with ASUU to please shelve the warning strike. We are also calling on the Federal Government to please reach out to settle so that all scores can be settled.”

  • UNIBEN students mount roadblock to protest against ASUU strike

    UNIBEN students mount roadblock to protest against ASUU strike

    Scores of students of the University of Benin on Wednesday barricaded the ever-busy Benin-Ore-Sagamu road to protest the ongoing industrial action by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    ASUU declared a four-week warning strike on Monday, after its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Lagos, to compel the Federal Government to implement the renegotiated 2009 agreement it had with government.

    They were in their numbers by the entrance of the Ugbowo campus of the university chanting slogans and solidarity songs like “aluta continua…” and “education is our right,” among others.

    The students expressed their frustration over the incessant strike of university teachers, urged the federal government to heed to ASUU demands.

    Newsmen reports that the protesting students carried placards with various inscriptions such as “5 years course has turned to 7 years; “FG settle ASUU” and “Enough is Enough.”

    Some of them turned the highway into a football field, playing in sets while the student’s leaders were sharing bottles of water, soft drink, pies and doughnuts to the demonstrators for refreshment.

    The students’ action caused a gridlock on the highway for about four hours, forcing many motorists to avoid the route while those going into the Edo capital had to divert their ways.

    Consequently, passengers were also stranded as many walked a long distance before getting vehicles to their destinations.

    Leading the protest, the President of the Students Union Government (SUG) in the institution, Foster Amadin, said they had been frustrated by the perennial strikes by the academic union.

    “Since two days now, we have been to our classes and there have not been lecturers to teach us. So we have nothing to do.

    “We asked what was happening and they told us ASUU is on strike again; that they are on a one-month warning strike.

    “So we now felt that we should come to the street to say we are tired.

    “We hereby express our grievances to the federal government, to the state government and whoever cares to listen and. We say we are tired.

    “We want to graduate. For a programme that is supposed to run for four years, we are spending five years and even more. We don’t want it anymore.

    “Let the federal government see to the demands of ASUU and let ASUU also consider the federal government’s position.

    “All we want is to go back to our classes. I want to graduate, I want to leave the school. I am tired and that is our grievance,” he said.

    Amadin, however, appealed to all concerned to see to the reason why they were at the gate protesting.