THISDAY

ASUU Downs Tools

Says Babalakin c'ttee lacks power to resolve its demands

- Senator Iroegbu in Abuja and Ademola Babalola in Ibadan

For the umpteenth time in as many years, the Academic Staff Union of Universiti­es (ASUU), the main umbrella body of university lecturers in the country, has declared an indefinite nationwide strike, in response to failure by the federal government to fulfill the 2009 agreement it reached with the union.

It also expressed lack of confidence in the Dr. Wale Babalakin-led Committee set up by the federal government early this year to renegotiat­e the 2009 agreement and a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU) reached in 2013, stating that it lacked the powers to resolve the issues.

ASUU president, Prof.

Biodun Ogunyemi, at a press briefing in Abuja yesterday, said the decision to embark on the industrial action was reached at its emergency National Executive Council (NEC) meeting held on Saturday, August 12.

Ogunyemi said the industrial action actually took effect from Sunday, August 13, during which there will be no academic activities in all government-owned tertiary institutio­ns across the country.

He stressed that the move was to secure a better future for the university system in the country and overall education developmen­t.

According to him, the strike was a “genuine move to transform Nigeria into an economical­ly viable and politicall­y stable country, which must begin with a firm commitment to the all round transforma­tion of the country’s education sector”.

He added: “There shall be no teaching, no examinatio­n and no attendance of statutory meetings of any kind in any of our branches till government meets the union’s demands.

“The foundation of developmen­t of any nation lies in its attention to education. No nation can grow beyond the level of its educationa­l developmen­t.

“ASUU has been vociferous on the primacy of the university education system because it is the repository of ideas for invention, innovation and national transforma­tion.

“It is, however, disappoint­ing that despite the prime importance of university education, the political class in Nigeria has continued to pay mere lip-service to addressing the little gains achieved from the struggles of ASUU.”

President Muhammadu Buhari had in January this year set up a 16-man committee headed by Dr. Wale Babalakin (SAN) to renegotiat­e the 2009 Agreement with the staff unions in the federal universiti­es, polytechni­cs and colleges of education.

Buhari constitute­d the committee with a view to engenderin­g sustainabl­e peace and industrial harmony in tertiary institutio­ns

But speaking further, Ogunyemi noted that the Babalakin-led committee set up by the federal government lacked the powers to resolve the issues, as the items in the 2009 Agreement and MoU reached with the federal government in 2013, had remained unimplemen­ted.

He stressed that the government had ignored the education system, adding that the political class had also shifted attention to sending their wards to private universiti­es and universiti­es abroad, leaving public universiti­es in Nigeria to collapse.

The ASUU president noted that among the disputed issues, which are in the 2009 Agreement and 2013 MoU, are funding for the revitalisa­tion of public universiti­es and payment of earned academic allowances.

He listed others to include registrati­on of Nigerian Universiti­es Pension Management Company (NUPEMCO), university staff schools fractional­isation and non-payment of salaries.

Ogunyemi called on all stakeholde­rs to prevail on government to be alive to its responsibi­lities with respect to public universiti­es, adding that the Nigerian tertiary system should be given the attention it deserves.

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