Tag: NLC

  • ASUU rejects plan to hike tuition fees in public universities

    ASUU rejects plan to hike tuition fees in public universities

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), has rejected the proposed plan by the Federal Government to hike tuition fees in Nigerian universities.

    Dr Lazarus Maigoro, Chairman of the University of Jos chapter of the union, made this known on Tuesday in Jos, during the nationwide peaceful protest organised by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

    Newsmen reports that the NLC embarked on a nationwide protest in solidarity with the ASUU and other affiliate unions, over the unresolved industrial dispute between the Federal Government and the lecturers.

    Maigoro, who alleged that the government was planning to hike tuition to N750, 000 per student, re-iterated that the ongoing strike was aimed at pushing for their demands, as well as making government address the contending issues.

    He insisted that if tuition fee was increased, the children of the common man would invariably be denied access to university education.

    “Government is planning to increase the tuition fee in public universities to N750,000 and this not acceptable to us in ASUU.

    “We will not accept it today, tomorrow or forever; if that happens the children of the poor and common people can not go to university.

    “So, this strike is not about us, but about the future of education in Nigeria, and this is why we are insisting that government must fund education because it is its responsibility to do so,” he said.

    Maigoro, however, appealed to the Federal Government to implement the agreement it entered with the union in 2009, in the interest of Nigeria’s future generation and the development of the university system.

    He particularly advised the government to implement the University Transparency Accountability Solution (UTAS), as a payment platform for all universities in the country.

  • [Video]: NLC protest rocks Lagos over  ASUU strike, biting economic conditions

    [Video]: NLC protest rocks Lagos over ASUU strike, biting economic conditions

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has staged a peaceful protest in solidarity with the strike action of the Academic Staff Union of Universities.

    The members of NLC occupied the Ikeja axis of Lagos on Tuesday to ask the Federal Government to yield to the demands of ASUU over its ongoing strike embarked upon on February 14 in the country.

    The police and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps have deployed personnel in critical infrastructure and facilities in response to the strike.

    Recall that  Nigeria Labour Congress had on Monday directed workers in state capitals and Abuja to join the protest.

    NLC also used the opportunity to address other political and economic issues affecting the country.

    Labour members, other unions, and civil society groups are gathered under the bridge axis in Ikeja.

    Vehicular movements towards the protest venue have been disrupted

    The score of protesters who stormed the street carried placards with several inscriptions such as ‘Stop importation of petrol, refine the refineries’, ‘Nigeria at 60 years of independence, more hunger in the land, etc.

    ‘One  of the Placards reads ‘Stop importation of petrol revive the refinery”

    Another placard read, “Reduce the cost of governance now, save the masses from poverty and hunger.”

    ‘One  of the Placards reads ‘Stop importation of petrol revive the refinery”

    ASUU and FG  have scheduled another meeting for August 1st to discuss the way forward as regards the demands made by the lecturers.

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  • ASUU strike: NLC begins 2-day solidarity protest

    ASUU strike: NLC begins 2-day solidarity protest

    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) has begun its solidarity protest over the lingering Academic Staff of University Union (ASUU) strike.

    According to NLC, the protest will hold from July 26th and 27th nationwide to force the Federal Government and ASUU to resolve their issues and suspend the lingering strike.

    Recall that ASUU has been at loggerheads with the Federal Government since Feb. 14 over failure to honour some past agreements, among others.

    The disagreement has kept students of most public universities at home for the past five months.

    Some other unions in the university system are also on strike due to disagreements with the Federal Government for different reasons.

    Mrs Funmi Sessi, state chairman of NLC Lagos state on Monday issued a directive at a stakeholders’ meeting at the union’s secretariat in Yaba, Lagos state, urging all sectors including the health, electricity and aviation to shut down operations and join the solidarity protest in support of the striking workers.

    Sessi said that the exercise will hold on Tuesday and Wednesday as part of the nationwide action.

  • ASUU Protest: NLC mobilises in Lagos, says set for 2-day action

    ASUU Protest: NLC mobilises in Lagos, says set for 2-day action

    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) on Monday called on members and civil society groups in Lagos State to come out en-masse on Tuesday morning to begin the two-day protest in solidarity with striking lecturers.

    Mrs Funmi Sessi, state chairman of NLC gave the directive at a stakeholders’ meeting at the union’s secretariat in Yaba, Lagos state.

    Sessi said that the exercise was ready to hold on Tuesday and Wednesday as part of the nationwide action.

    This is despite an appeal by the Federal Government that the NLC shelve the planned nationwide protest.

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has been at loggerheads with the Federal Government since Feb. 14 over failure to honour some past agreements, among others.

    The disagreement has kept students of most public universities at home for the past five months.

    Some other unions in the university system are also on strike due to disagreements with the Federal Government for different reasons.

    Sessi directed all sectors including the health, electricity and aviation to shutdown operations and join the solidarity protest in support of the striking workers.

    “We will be converging as early as 6:30 a.m. at Ikeja and take off by 7.00 a.m. to deliver a letter to Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu in Alausa.

    “The protest is to support ASUU in the ongoing strike, so we call on all affiliate members to come out en masse,’’ she said.

    Sessi called on Lagos state-owned tertiary institutions to also join in the protests.

    “We are going to mobilise our members and be fully on the street,” she said.

    Sessi said that electricity workers would be part of the protest, but advised nurses to attend to only emergency cases.

    She assured that the union had adopted measures to ensure that the protest was not hijacked.

    Sessi said law enforcement agencies should not brutalise its members.

    ASUU Zonal Coordinator, Lagos State, Dr Adelaja Odukoya, said the protest was for liberation of the nation’s tertiary education.

    He said lecturers were being paid slave salaries and government was not concerned about quality of education in the country.

    Odukoya said the union does not like strike but wanted to press home demand to make the nation’s universities competitive with global standard.

    “The struggle is in the interest of our children.

    “Enough is enough, government must fund education system. If Nigeria must develop, attention must be paid to our university education,” he said.

    He said the strike had lingered for five months and the lecturers would not back down if government does not meet the demands of ASUU.

    Odukoya appealed to all Nigerians to join in the solidarity protest in the interest of the Nigeria youths.

    Other union members took turns to lament ill treatment and injustice being meted on the lecturers and the nation’s education sector.

    The Federal Government had urged the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to shelve the nationwide planned protest in solidarity with the trade unions.

    Minister of Labour and Employment, Sen. Chris Ngige, made the appeal at a meeting with the leadership of NLC in his office on Thursday in Abuja.

    Ngige said this in a statement signed by My Olajide Oshundun, Head, Press and Public Relations, in the ministry.

    The decision to embark on a `National Day of Protest was taken at the NLC National Executive Council (NEC) in June.

    According the minister, the Federal Government has made a lot of efforts to resolve the impasse in the university system, saying that efforts were still ongoing.

    He also reminded the NLC leadership that he incorporated them into the tripartite conciliation going on in his ministry.

    Ngige added that they were very much aware of the efforts of the government to resolve the impasse, so they could not embark on any rally or protest.

    He further said that the Federal Executive Council (FEC) mandated him to notify them of the serious security implications of the planned protest.

    Responding, both the Deputy President of NLC, Mr Najeem Usman, and General Secretary, Comrade Emmanuel Ugboajah, had assured the government of a peaceful protest by the Congress,

    They also said that infiltrators would not be allowed to participate in the protest.

    Ugboajah had said NLC appreciated all the efforts of the minister towards the resolution of the industrial actions in the university system and pleaded with him not to hands off the conciliation.

  • Road to anarchy: ASUU, labour and solidarity protest – By Dakuku Peterside

    Road to anarchy: ASUU, labour and solidarity protest – By Dakuku Peterside

    Barring any last-minute change of mind, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) will, this week, embark on a nationwide protest in solidarity with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) which has been on strike for more than six months forcing students to stay at home endlessly. The planned protest by the mother of all labour unions is to put pressure on the government to resolve ASUU demands to enable our students return to school.

    At face value, this is a sensible thing to do. The intended consequences seem noble, but we all know that the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Often, no one can control the outcome of events like this, and it easily dovetails into mayhem and anarchy. No matter the claim by NLC that it will control the protest and not allow it to be hijacked by hoodlums and miscreants, it is evident that it does not have what it takes to exercise such control, especially given the current socio- political and economic climate that Nigeria is facing.

    As a lover of democracy, I often support the democratic right of citizens to peaceful protest and any means of lawfully compelling the government to pay attention to issues of public interest and importance, and in this instance , education . However, in this case, I advise caution. These times and seasons are not conducive for such disruptive mass action because of the unintended consequences.

    First, this is an election season, and politicians love manipulating circumstances to achieve ignoble advantages. Any protest now may be hijacked by politicians to score cheap and needless political points.. Oftentimes, issues unrelated to the primary reason for the protest in the first place may take centre stage. A protest by NLC may be used as a platform to cause insurrection and attempt to destabilise the polity and cause confusion everywhere.

    Second, this planned protest is coming at a time of dire economic straits, with inflation hitting the roof tops, cost of diesel and petrol beyond the reach of many, collapsing social services, and
    foreign exchange scarcity. The implication is that the average Nigerian is under economic pressure, feels angry and frustrated . Mass action could add to the economic pressure families face and provide building block for unanticipated effect .

    And third, the Nigerian social milieu of heightened uncertainty and insecurity is not a conducive ecosystem for volatile protests and possible demonstrations because of the propensity for people to circumvent it for perverse objectives.

    Besides, there is sufficient evidence that when labour union protests are not managed properly to achieve the desired objective, it could spiral off to violence that can lead to radical change or anarchy. These were the cases in Italy (1920), Venezuela ( 1997), Lebanon (2020) and most recently, Sri Lanka (2022). In all these cases, situations such as the collapse of the currency, soaring inflation, and spiralling unemployment provided the fertile ground for protests by labour movements. These protests became the catalyst for unprecedented controversy and public disorder with severe national consequences in all cases. These exact situations are prevalent in Nigeria today and are getting worse by the day. These situations may provide the fuel to burn the country down, and the NLC planned protest might offer the fire for the inferno that may consume our social and political space.

    Whereas NLC intention to use the protest to draw all parties attention to the prolonged strike is germane , I have a patriotic duty to call on labour to reconsider the plan for this protest at this inauspicious moment. NLC must look at the big picture and act in the national interest. It behoves NLC to know that it will be directly and precariously liable if the protest leads to anarchy. There are better ways to show solidarity with ASUU to achieve a better result than just protesting. NLC must liaise with ASUU and mediate between it and the government on this issue, considering the historical antecedents behind this crisis.

    ASUU has been on strike for over six months, and there seems to be no end in sight of the action. ASUU is demanding that the government fulfils the agreement it entered into in the past, increase lecturers’ salaries and provide better funding for higher education in Nigeria. These demands aim to improve the quality of education and quality of living of university lecturers. These are legitimate demands, however one looks at it.

    Historically, ASUU is synonymous with strike actions in Nigeria, and for decades they have been making demands, entering into agreements with the government which the government reneges on frequently leading to industrial actions. This has been a recurring decimal in our higher institutions for over four decades, and it has defied all governments and does not seem to be exacerbating soon. ASUU -government brouhaha is endangering the future of our youths, who either have their education truncated with the concomitant effect of producing half-baked graduates or the students spending more time than necessary to complete their degrees.
    Everyone becomes a loser in this disagreement, and the nation suffers. In this disagreement, it is crucial that ASUU comes to the table with an open mind, ready to take any cause of action that will make all parties winners in the pursuit for quality education .

    ASUU must see the reality of our economic circumstances – the government is struggling to pay salaries, and we literarily borrow to finance government activities. Our revenue to debt service ratio has moved from 95% to 116%. The implicationis that all our income is not enough to service our debt. Crude oil theft has reached an embarrassing crescendo, and the government is spending billions of dollars yearly to fight insurgency, bandits, terrorists, and secessionists all over the country. The global crisis post-COVID 19 pandemic and the debilitating effects of the Russian – Ukraine war have created energy and food crises worldwide. There is also the counter narrative that a government that spends about N42b yearly to maintain the several aircrafts in the presidential fleet , spends 70 percent of its budget on recurrent expenditure and allows wastage in the management of the economy cannot in good conscience say
    it cannot not fund education . I can rightly paraphrase John F Kennedy to put this in proper perspective , “ if the pursuit of learning is not defended by the educated citizens ( leaders), it will not be defended by all “ .

    ASUU , as a body of researchers , must come to the table with a bouquet of innovative ideas on university funding that will rely less on government, student fees payment models, university-industry alliances, private sector-driven convergence and university entrepreneurship to boost the funding of our tertiary institutions. There have been calls for complete university autonomy to create a competitive university education market that may provide the funds for quality education. ASUU can advocate for a joint government and university student loan arrangement that may give a lasting solution to Nigeria’s university funding issues. Academics are great researchers, and I firmly believe that it behoves on them to come up with the best formula for solving university funding crises that will permanently eliminate ASUU strikes.

    The government, on the other hand, must show more seriousness and sincerity in negotiation with ASUU. Nigerians are fed up with the macabre dance, and many feel that government must do more to break the impasse. Government expenditure profile does not reflect the fact that it prioritises education and by extension the future of Nigerian youths. All sides in this dispute must be ready to shift positions based on current realities. They must find a win-win solution to resolve ASUU-government logjam as quickly as possible. It will be shameful if our students lose one academic year due to this strike. The government should remember that governance is a continuum and must not enter into agreements that it does not have any intentions of keeping immediately or in the future.
    The government must work with ASUU to devise a lasting solution to the problems. It is unacceptable and irresponsible for government to enter into agreements only to renege on them . The government should study how universities are funded and how academics are rewarded in other countries and learn from that. Lecturers are bona fide members of the community and spend and buy things from the same markets as others. They are entitled to a living wage and all the perks of their office. ASUU and the government must draw a line on this issue and do a quid pro quo that is mutually beneficial.

    Now is the time for all stakeholders in the education sector to rally round to save our higher education sector from collapse. We must solve the problem of strike actions once and for all if we use this opportunity to be creatively innovative in dealing with university funding. The world is moving fast, and it seems we are getting left behind. Instead of discussing the ASUU strike, we should look at how to develop the quality of our higher education to international standards.
    We must develop our universities to compete locally and globally. It is time to educate our youths, who are the hope of tomorrow, to be more productive and proactive. There is nothing better than quality education as a propeller for growth and development. Our tomorrow lies in what we do today to correct all the anomalies with
    our educational system. Let us make hay while the sun shines.

    NLC must reconsider its plans to protest in the next few days, and acknowledge the fact that we are in a precarious situation . Nearly every little act of disruptive mass action can produce unintended and adverse consequences.

  • ASUU strike: FG urges NLC to shelve planned solidary protest

    ASUU strike: FG urges NLC to shelve planned solidary protest

    The Federal Government has urged the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to shelve its nationwide planned protest in solidarity with the trade unions in the Nigeria public universities and others.

    Minister of Labour and Employment, Sen. Chris Ngige, made the appeal at a meeting with the leadership of NLC in his office on Thursday in Abuja.

    Ngige said this in a statement signed by My Olajide Oshundun, Head, Press and Public Relations, in the ministry.

    Newsmen reports that the decision to embark on a `National Day of Protest was taken at the  NLC National Executive Council (NEC) in June.

    The National protest is scheduled for July 26 and 27 to ensure students go back to school and also in support of  the unions in Nigeria’s public universities fighting for quality education.

    According to the minister, the Federal Government has made a lot of efforts to resolve the impasse in the university system, saying that efforts were still ongoing.

    He also reminded the NLC leadership that he incorporated them into the tripartite conciliation going on in his ministry.

    Ngige added that they were very much aware of the efforts of the government to resolve the impasse, so they could not embark on any rally or protest.

    He further said that the Federal Executive Council (FEC) mandated him to notify them of the serious security implications of the planned protest.

    According to him, a security report also sent to his office by the Department of State Services (DSS), strongly warned against holding the protest, slated for July 26 and 27.

    He urged the NLC National Executive Council (NEC) to reconsider the planned rally as hoodlums might take advantage of it to cause breach of security.

    Ngige expressed the concern of the government that politicians might cash in on the rally to wreak havoc in the country.

    “The masses might wrongly interpret the rally as a ploy by the NLC to enhance the chances of the Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate, a situation which could spur the supporters of the other political parties into violence.

    “Section 40 of the Constitution is clear on Freedom of Association. One of the provisions is that people of like minds can organise themselves and form a political party.

    “There is also a provision that people in work or employment can organise themselves into unions. They are two parallels. Parallels do not meet.

    “I heard when you said you are mobilising for Labour Party. But, a trade union is not a political party. Look at the Trade Union Act.

    “It does not allow trade unions to use their contributions to support any political party.”

    Responding, both the Deputy President of NLC, Mr  Najeem Usman and General Secretary, Comrade Emmanuel Ugboajah, assured the government of a peaceful protest by the Congress,

    They also said that infiltrators would not be allowed to participate in the protest.

    Ugboajah said NLC appreciated all the efforts of the minister towards the resolution of the industrial actions in the university system and pleaded with him, not to hand off the conciliation.

    “We commend you for championing the harmonisation of salaries of workers in the country. We don’t understand why a messenger in NNPC or Central Bank should be earning more than a level 8 officer in the ministry,’’ he said.

    Newsmen also report that the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), and other trade unions in the education sector have been on strike for more than five months over alleged failure of the government to keep to an agreement entered with the unions.

    The demands of the striking workers include funding of universities, salaries and earned allowances of lecturers.

    Also in attendance at the meeting were the Minister of State, Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo SAN, and the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry, Ms Kachollom Daju.

  • I will be surprised if NLC protest over ASUU strike – Ngige

    I will be surprised if NLC protest over ASUU strike – Ngige

    Minister of labour and employment, Chris Ngige says he will be surprised if the National Labour Congress (NLC) goes ahead with the planned protest scheduled for July 26 and 27 in solidarity with the strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    The Minister also said the NLC has representatives on the negotiation with ASUU, and the congress is privy to all discussions with the university lecturers’ union.

    Addressing journalists, Ngige said such protest is against international labour practice.

    “It is a very incongruous situation I must tell you. Why? NLC is on the table of the discussion. They are there. I invited them as the head of the federation to which ASUU belongs, to which SSANU belongs, to which NAAT belongs, he said.

    “I invited them. And so, they are on the table as their senior partner. That’s one. Two, we have a National Labour Advisory Council inaugurated in January 2021. It is an ILO instrument, an ILO architecture for labour unions, governments, and the private sector to come together at any given time.

    “So, we’ve just finished our meeting in March, and this issue was tabled before them. And the NLC is in NLAC, the National Labour Advisory Council, and much more importantly, the head of NLC, Nigeria, has an affiliate of workers federation, worldover called International Trade Union Congress.

    “So, I will be surprised if he’s going ahead with his NEC to do a demonstration, knowing fully well that that is not permissible in international labour parlance.”

  • ASUU: FG, NLC bicker over proposed two-day  solidarity strike

    ASUU: FG, NLC bicker over proposed two-day solidarity strike

    The Federal Government has declared the proposed nationwide protest and solidarity strike proposed by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC,) over the ongoing 5-month old strike by University lecturers in the country as illegal.

    The Federal Government also  frowned at  the civil aviation workers, for proposing the two-day nationwide protest

    NLC had announced that it would embark on a nationwide protest on July 26 and 27 to press home the need to resolve the over five-month-old strike embarked by the four university-based unions.

    NLC has earlier told the government that the right to peaceful assembly and protest is a fundamental right guaranteed by the Nigerian constitution and the UN charter on human and people’s rights.

    The four unions are the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities, SSANU, the Non-Academic Staff Union of Allied and Educational Institutions, NASU, and the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT).

    Reacting to the proposed strike,  Alhaji Mohammed said, “While we’re still on Labour, I think we should also start to interrogate what labour is doing. The NLC is not a political party. The NLC can go on strike or protest if the rights of NLC members are involved.

    “What the NLC is planning in the next two days is about interest. There’s no dispute whatsoever between NLC as a body with the federal government. Well yes, there is a dispute between some members of NLC, ASUU, and the Federal Government which is being looked into and NLC itself is a party to the committee that is looking into the solution.

    “So calling out people on street protest you begin to wonder, what is the motive of NLC in this matter? But you see here, we do not interrogate what NLC is doing. NLC by its laws, cannot even give out pamphlets. NLC is supposed to be completely insulated from politics. Now, if you declare a dispute with us, yes you can go on strike.

    “Even that one would depend on whether certain steps have been taken or not. But this particular NLC, you know, asking and mobilizing people to come out on strike on July 26 and 27, is clearly on nothing.”

    Reminded that NLC was worried about the prolonged strike which is affecting their children as well, he said: “the federal government is as worried as NLC and everybody, but the law is the law.

    “What we are saying is that rather than…what I expect NLC to do as an umbrella body is to find the solution, to join Federal Government in finding the solution. They are part of the tripartite agreement that has been negotiating with the federal government on this ASUU issue. So why are they now going out to take sides? I think you also interrogate it yourselves.

    “I think it is popular to get NLC out and support but ask yourselves how does that solve the problem? How does that solve the problem?

    “What you are going to create is more anarchy. And I think the NLC should think twice about their proposed strike in solidarity with ASUU. Is as if the federal government is doing nothing about ASUU. No. And they’ve been involved in this negotiation all along so why now?”

    On his part, the Minister of Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika while responding to the question on how concerned he was about the threat by the aviation union joining the ASUU strike said, “I’m naturally concerned about this if the aviation unit will shut down in support of ASUU. I would say they do not need to. I will say also that we should begin to look at civil aviation as a critical national security enterprise. It has all the implications.

    “We should not contemplate or think about an aviation disaster. We should also think about the general activity of the economy of Nigeria without civilization. It’s okay. This is a democracy, you can push for demands, but in pressing for demands you should be reasonable in doing so.

    “Where, the life that you’re trying to promote would be seriously affected and hampered. Where lives can be lost because of your activity. I think it should be reconsidered.

    “So, civil aviation workers, I think should not be part of this. Yes, I am concerned, and yes we’ve spoken to them and I don’t think they will join because they know that there’s a huge responsibility of lives on their heads.

    “If you’re an air traffic controller, it involves national security. It involves the capability of preventing external aggression and so on. I believe that they are very aware of the enormous responsibility upon them in civil aviation and they should continue to see it so and continue to be as law-abiding as we want them to be.”

    Asked if he had had any conversation with the aviation union, Senator Sirika said, “Yes, it is an ongoing thing. So in civil aviation, we speak to them almost daily. They are part of us. They are workers like every other person is and we interact with them.

    “In the ministry, we have their representatives who speak to me time and again, probably on daily basis. Yes, we have spoken and I don’t think they will join and yes, we are concerned, but yes also reminding them of the enormous responsibility upon their necks and our necks.”

    Further asked if the two weeks directive by the President to resolve the issue is achievable, Ngige said he proposed one week to resolve the issue but the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, volunteered to resolve the issues with ASUU in two weeks adding that he hopes the issue will be resolved at the stipulated time.

    The Labour minister advised the unions to table their case before the Ministry of Education whom the President has directed to resolve the issue.

    Meanwhile, the Minister Of Labour and Employment Senator Chris Ngige has told journalists that there was no veracity in the media report that President Buhari ordered him on Tuesday to hands-off renegotiations with the striking unions.

    Describing the report as false, Ngige said, “Anyway I saw one of the dailies writing something like that today (Wednesday), but the truth of the matter is there is no such thing, it’s just a categorical untruth, there is nothing like hands-off.”

    Meanwhile,  organised labour said it would not fold its hands when some of its affiliate unions are having issues with the government.

    It also said that the law provides that no permission is required for any peaceful assembly and protest.

    President of the NLC, Ayuba Wabba, while reacting to the position of the federal government on labours involvement in the proposed solidarity protest said, “Its elementary knowledge that the right to peaceful assembly and protest is a fundamental right guaranteed by the Nigerian constitution, the UN Charter on human and peoples’ right.

    “The current crop of our political elites have excised this right. Secondly, NLC is directly involved in the current dispute affecting four of its affiliated trade unions in the university education system namely SANNU, NASU, NAAT, and ASUU. Lai Mohammed is economical with the truth.

    “As citizens, our children have been out of school for five months, and their destinies are being destroyed. It is enough reason for a national protest

    “The law provides that no permission is required for any peaceful assembly and protest. Lai Mohammed’s statement is unlawful and lacks legal basis in a democratic society.”

  • ASUU raises students’ hopes, NEC set to meet on August 1st

    ASUU raises students’ hopes, NEC set to meet on August 1st

    The National Executive Council of the striking Academic Staff Union of Universities  (ASUU) has fixed a meeting for August 1st,2022.

    It was gathered that a decision on whether to suspend or continue with the strike which enters its will be taken at the meeting.

    Recall that ASUU on Monday, February 14, 2022, embarked on industrial action over what the union described as the failure of the government to address some of its demands.

    The chairman of ASUU, Federal University of Technology, Minna chapter, Dr. Gbolahan Bolarin, confirmed the planned meeting to newsmen on Monday.

    Bolarin said the meeting would be held either on July 30 or August 1, 2022.

    “The NEC will be holding its meeting early next month (August). That should be August 1. The meeting might even be on July 30,” he said.

    ASUU had cautioned the government against the proliferation of tertiary institutions and the failure to approve the deployment of the Universities Transparency Accountability System (UTAS)

    The union had also insisted on the release of the White Paper of the visitation panels to universities and the release of revitalization funds for the development of universities, among others.

    “The NEC will be holding its meeting early next month (August). That should be August 1. The meeting might even be on July 30,” he said.
    Meanwhile, the National Labour Congress (NLC) has concluded plans to embark on a nationwide protest on July 26 and 27 in solidarity with the strike by  ASUU

    In a letter dated July 15 and addressed to chairpersons of the NLC in the states, Ayuba Wabba, the congress’ national president, and Emmanuel Ugboaja, general secretary, said the protest is aimed at getting “our children back to school and support our unions in Nigeria’s public universities fighting for quality education”.

    They designated the Labour House in the federal capital territory (FCT) and secretariats of the NLC as the takeoff points for the protest.

  • NLC declares nationwide protest over ASUU strike

    NLC declares nationwide protest over ASUU strike

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has announced plans to commence a two-day nationwide protest on Tuesday, July 26, 2022, in solidarity with the ongoing strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    This was disclosed in a circular issued to all the state chairmen of the NLC. The circular was signed by the National President of the congress, Ayuba Wabba.

    NLC said, “We bring you fraternal greetings from the national secretariat of the NLC.

    Related Story:

    “In line with the decisions of the National Executive Council meeting of the NLC held on June 30, 2022, we have scheduled as follows the National Days of Protest to get our children back to school and support our unions in Nigeria’s public universities fighting for quality education.”

    The protest, the circular noted, would be held on “Tuesday, July 26, 2022, and Wednesday, July 27, 2022, in all the states of the Federation and Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory.

    “Take-off point is the NLC State Secretariats and the Labour House, Abuja. You are requested to immediately convene the meetings of your SAC to disseminate this information and to fully mobilise workers in the states for this very important protest for good governance,” the circular stressed.