The Federal Government said on Tuesday
that it was renegotiating the 2009 agreements it signed with the members
of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, who are currently on
strike.
The Minister of Labour and Productivity,
Chief Emeka Wogu, stated this while answering questions from
journalists after briefing members of the National Working Committee of
the Peoples Democratic Party on the activities of his ministry in Abuja.
The reason for the renegotiation,
according to him, was to clear some grey areas in the agreements, which
he said were put in place before the coming into office of the present
government.
The nine-point agreements ASUU signed
with the Federal government 2009 included funding requirements for
revitalisation of the Nigerian universities; Federal government
assistance to state universities; establishment of NUPEMCO and
progressive increase in annual budgetary allocation to education to 26
per cent between 2009 and 2020; and earned allowances.
The minister, who refused to say whether
there was a particular area of the agreements that was not acceptable
to the government, however pleaded with the university lecturers to
return to the classroom.
Wogu said, “We are renegotiating the 2009 agreement which predate this administration. It therefore has to be renegotiated.
“However, while we are still talking, we are pleading with ASUU to go back to their work.”
Meanwhile, Niger State Governor,
Babangida Aliyu, has said lecturers of states and private universities
should not join federal universities staff to embark on strike.
Aliyu said this in Minna on Tuesday when
he received in audience members of the Governing board of the Ibrahim
Badamasi Babangida University, Lapai, in Government House.
The governor argued that in a
federation, what obtains at the Federal level should not necessarily
affect states, especially if the demands of the aggrieved lecturers were
not the same.
He said, “The union at the centre cannot
ask people at the state to go on strike. State universities are like
private universities; they cannot go on strike just because their
colleagues at the federal universities are on strike.”
Aliyu said he discussed the first convocation of the university with the visitors and the ongoing strike by members of ASUU.
Also, ASUU has called on Executive
Secretary of the National Universities commission, Prof. Julius Okojie,
to publicly declare his assets.
In a joint statement by the chairmen of
the University of Calabar branch of the union, Dr. James Okpiliya and
his Cross River State University of Technology counterpart, Dr. Nsing
Ogar, the ASUU officials accused the NUC boss of fueling the crisis in
the university system.
They noted that instead of addressing the issues in dispute, Okojie rather resorted to campaign of calumny against the union.
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