ASUU to suspend strike after reaching agreement with govt

ASUU-Strike

ASUU President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi and other executives

ASUU President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi and other executives

Worried students of tertiary institutions in Nigeria can now heave a sigh of relief as the striking university lecturers have agreed to consider the federal government’s offer and suspend their strike.

Speaking after a meeting of the lecturers with the federal government early this morning, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, ASUU President, said that government and ASUU had reached an agreement on their demands with the Federal Government.

The meeting which was an effort at resolving the lingering strike embarked upon by the union, was attended by the leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), the Minister of Education, among others in Abuja.

Ogunyemi said that ASUU would accept the proposal presented by the Federal Government on its demands.

“The concrete proposal reached during the conciliatory meeting will be taken back to our members at the National Executive Council, (NEC) for further deliberation.

“We will report back our position to the Federal Government in the next one week on whether to call off the strike or not,” he said.

He, however, called on the Federal Government to fast track the process of implementing the 2009 agreement with the union.

Ogunyemi stressed the need to finding a lasting solution to the challenges facing the country’s education sector, especially at the University level.

Also speaking after the conciliatory meeting, Sen. Chris Ngige, Minister of Labour and Employment said the Federal Government and ASUU had resolved to set up a seven-man committee to work out modalities for the actualization of its 2009 agreement.

It will be recalled that members of ASUU had embarked on indefinite strike on Aug. 13, following government’s failure to implement the agreement reached with the union in Nov. 2016.

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ASUU, on Aug. 17, had met with the officials of the Ministry of Education and Labour and Employment where it was agreed that the union should consult and report back to the government within a week.

ASUU’s demands include the disputed registration of the Nigerian Universities Pension Management Company, fractionalisation of salaries in Federal Universities, gross under-funding and non-funding of State Universities.

Others are arrears and implementation of Earned Academic Allowances, release of fund for revitalisation of public universities as spelt out in the 2013 Memorandum of Understanding, among others.

Ngige said that the Ministry of Education would be represented by three people, ASUU by three members, while government would be represented by one person who would serve as the Chairman of the Committee.

The minister, however, stressed the important of education to the development of every nation in the world.

He assured ASUU that government would implement all the seven demands of the union as contained in the 2009 agreement.

Ngige added that government had already shown commitment towards addressing the plight of the union by paying some of their shortfall salary arrears.

He also noted that the issue in contention was inherited from the past administration, adding that the present administration will do all within its power to address those challenges.

According to him, government is a continuous process.

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