Tag: Emeka Nwajiuba

  • Why Nwajiuba was absent from APC presidential primary election

    Prof Chinedu Nwajiuba, younger brother to former Minister of State for Education, Emeka Nwajiuba has explained why his elder brother did not attend the special national convention of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) at the Eagle Square in Abuja.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Uwajiuba, who was regarded as one of the key contestants, was visibly absent at the convention, where the presidential flagbearer of the party for the 2023 presidential election is decided.

    His name was called several times to come out to address the APC convention but he was not available.

    In a statement, he issued last night, the younger Nwajiuba who is the immediate past Vice chancellor of Federal University Ndufu Ebonyi State said his brother was betrayed by the leadership of the party.

    The statement reads: “Many friends are calling to find out why my brother, Dr. Hon. Chukwuemeka Nwajiuba did not come out to address the APC convention.

    “Simple: The understanding from the highest levels prior to his involvement, and considering his role in the founding of the APC, was that of consensus as was with the National Chairmanship a few months ago.

    “With that understanding, the Presidential ticket was to come to the South, and the southeast.

    “This has been the hope till the end of the negotiations. He, not wanting to be part of the Dollar and Naira bazaar, is convinced that what Nigeria needs now is no more of the same thing that has kept Nigeria at the low level it has been.

    “Our challenges as a country cannot be addressed at the same energy level by which they were created

    “God order our footsteps towards a better life for all Nigerians. God bless you”.

  • Why ASUU shouldn’t be paid-Education minister, Nwajiuba

    Why ASUU shouldn’t be paid-Education minister, Nwajiuba

    Emeka Nwajiuba the Minister of State for Education, has said it doesn’t make sense for members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU)to continue to earn salaries while still embarking on a strike.

    Recall that ASUU began one month warning strike on February 14, 2022 and later added 2 months to it with a warning it would embark on an indefinite strike should FG refuse to listen to its demands.

    Nwajiuba said, “The lecturers have continued to earn salaries while on strike; it doesn’t make sense to earn salaries when you have refused to work.

    “If you refuse to even pay them, by the time they call off the strike, they will still come back to fight for the payment of the period they refused to work.

    “You can air your grievances, come to the negotiation table without refusing to work. The issue of the strike has become a thing of concern. I have four children; two have graduated while the other two are still in public universities. I feel for them, I feel for other students who are at home. I feel the same way other parents feel, but can I bring money from my house and give it to ASUU?

    “The Ministry of Education isn’t the employer of the lecturers, we are a supervisory body, and there is no way we can fire or hire someone. Universities have governing councils that supervise the activities that go on, our job as in the ministry is to supervise, we can’t meddle in.

    “On the issue of the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System, I am also paid via the IPPIS, it is owned by the government, there is no way you can tell the government to throw away its platform and pay you with another platform.”

    In addition, the President of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities, (SSANU) Mohammed Ibrahim, has accused the Federal Government of focusing on frivolous things and neglecting the education sector and the youths.

    Ibrahim who spoke during the 2022 May Day celebration in Abuja said the universities were forced to shut down due to government insincerity, adding that the standard of education had really fallen terribly bad.

    He noted that, “Our universities have been forced to shut down due to the insincerity of the government to keep to its promises. The standard of education continues to go down due to the insensitivity of the government and the inability to provide a good teaching, learning and work environment through lack of basic facilities that will make them compete favourably with their peers in other parts of the world.

    “The morale of university workers is dampened by the poor pay package and the government appears to be paying lip service to education. It is very clear that government pays more attention to frivolous things and has neglected youths that are said to be the leaders of tomorrow.’’

    The SSANU President frowned at the condition of Nigerian workers whom he said were going through perilous times in form of insecurity, economic hardship and other challenges.

    He noted, “This year’s Workers Day comes when Nigerian workers are passing through perilous and dangerous times. Nigerian workers and indeed members of our great union are confronted with diverse challenges like rising spate of armed banditry, kidnappings, insurgency, economic hardship and worst of all, the inability of the government to keep to agreements it entered into with all the university-based unions in 2009.

    “Our members have been denied payment of new Minimum Wage Consequential Adjustment arrears and backlog of earned allowances in addition to other violations of our rights and privileges. Our universities have been forced to shut down due to the insincerity of the government to keep to its promises.”

    He appealed to the government to resolve the ongoing strike by university workers and also tackle the challenges facing the country.

    “Toying with the future of our children will spell doom for our dear country. I call on the government to look into the demands of all the university-based unions and take urgent steps to address them so that our children will go back to school,’’ the union urged.

  • 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.”

  • Education Minister speaks on reopening of schools

    Education Minister speaks on reopening of schools

    Mr Emeka Nwajiuba, the Minister of State for Education, says the Federal Ministry of Education will not take any risk over reopening of schools in the face of COVID-19.

    Nwajiuba said this at the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 daily news conference on Wednesday in Abuja.

    He said that the schools would not reopen until government was sure that the children could go to school safe and not infected with the deadly coronavirus or got infect by others.

    He said that it would work in conjunction with the World Health Organisation (WHO) before the reopening of schools.

    The minister added that the ministry would publish what must be done before schools could be reopened by either private or public school.

    He also said that the children must go to school safe.

    “We want all our children to go to school by the time the schools would have been able to achieve physical distancing,’’ he said.

    Nwajiuba explained that for tertiary institutions, there would be need to have a semester within a semester for the students.

    He added that while some courses would do their semester first, others would follow suit in a bid to maintain social distancing measure.

    He urged lecturers in tertiary institutions to use the period to upgrade themselves.

    “Period like this should not be wasted and tertiary institutions must be functioning.’’

    For secondary school students, the minister said that those in senior secondary might resume before their junior counterparts.

    He said the plan was that the children should resume by the time schools had achieved the physical distancing measure.

    “We may have classes in the morning and afternoon at the moment for the purpose of social distancing and all the infrastructure within the school will be used to achieve this,’’ the minister said.

    He said that the ministry would also look at the sanitary condition of the schools before reopening, noting that schools must be ready to display manually-made hand sanitisers’ machine.

    He said that the only condition for reopening of schools would be that they must be ready to receive the students by providing all the needed materials to stop the spread of COVID-19.