The Academic Staff Union of Universities ASUU, on Monday
began an indefinite strike over Federal Government’s refusal to implement
agreement reached with. The union leader said that the decision to embark
on the strike was painful but that there was no going back
until government took a positive step to address their demands.
The National President of the union , Dr. Isa Fagge, said in
Lagos on Monday that the decision to embark on the action was reached during
the National Executive Council meeting of the union held at Olabisi Onabanjo
University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State on Monday.
He spoke with newsmen via the telephone after the Chairman,
University of Lagos chapter of ASUU, Dr. Karo Ogbinaka, had told journalists that
the strike would be total.
According to Fagge, the strike will be “comprehensive, total
and indefinite.’’
“The strike starts today (Monday) and it is going to last
for as long as the Federal Government wants it,” he said.
He explained that the union embarked on the strike because
the government had reneged on the agreement it reached with ASUU before the
lecturers suspended a similar action in February 2012.
“The Federal Government has refused to implement some of the
issues contained in a 2009 agreement it had with us,” he said.
Fagge added that the government had also reneged on the
Memorandum of Understanding it entered into with the union in December 2011.
“Before now, there has been this issue of the implementation
of the key issues contained in the 2009 agreement we entered into with the
Federal Government.
“We have had several meetings and deliberations to let
government understand why these issues must be resolved but it is like the more
we meet and deliberate, the messier the issue gets.
“One of the issues that needed to be addressed was basically
that of the academic earned allowance.
“This earned allowance, and other issues, had dragged on
until government then agreed to write an MOU with the union.
“But as we speak, there has been nothing to show that
government was committed to an MOU it willingly wrote to better the university
sector.
“It is in this regard that we are embarking on an indefinite
strike,” he said.
Fagge said that
having waited patiently for the government to honour the agreement, the ASUU
decided to meet, deliberate and come up with the action.
Also, Ogbinaka said government’s penchant for reneging on
agreements was not acceptable to the union.
He said that government entered into the MOU with ASUU after
the union suspended its strike two and a half years ago.
Ogbinaka who admitted that government had implemented the 70
years retirement age for professors and
the pension commission for university workers, noted that government had
not been forthcoming on the earned allowance demand of the lecturers.
“I want to say that not all lecturers are entitled to this
allowance, but as we speak, not a single lecturer under the aforementioned
categories has received any such allowance.
“What we are demanding as the earned allowance is not more
than N12, 500 per person, yet government is saying it cannot afford such.
“Government was actually thinking of the cost implication of
everything but after much deliberation, government agreed to sign the MoU and
said it had set aside N100bn to take care of all the burning issues.
“However, government came back to us and pleaded for a
reduction and we decided to step the cost down to 80 per cent. That not enough,
it also appealed for another reduction to 50 per cent.
“This 50 per cent, government said, will be a one off
payment; that it was from that 50 per cent that we shall take care of
everything, including the earned allowance.
“This did not go down well with us and so we decided to meet
and take the decision we have just taken,” he said.
According to him, the Nigerian tertiary education sector is
where it is because of inadequate funding.
He said that one of the reasons why there were no foreign
scholars in the system was because of the poor wages.
“When we agitate about earned allowance, we are also using
it as a means of attracting foreign scholars so it is not all about our
personal interest.
“We are also using it to address the issue of brain drain in
the system. As it were, our best brains are all drifting into industries and
other sectors that will pay them better, rather than ploughing back into the
academic sector.
“To us, it is all about looking at a bigger picture and
putting things in the right place,’’ he said.
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