The
National President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, Dr.
Nasir Fagge, on Thursday vowed that ASUU would continue its on-going
strike until the union’s demands were met by the Federal Government.
Fagge made the declaration while addressing journalists at the University of Lagos on the latest development on the strike.
He said, “I wish to state clearly our
position so far in the whole process of the negotiations with government
since the strike commenced. We are currently calling on government to
meet our demands as presented in the agreements we both signed in 2009
and then we can start talking about any other form of re-negotiation.
“A lot of people are asking us to shift
grounds by accepting government’s offer of N30bn and going back to class
while we reach an agreement on when the next instalments will be paid.
“I do not see that as being acceptable
to us for now because we had made that mistake before, whereby only the
salary component of the agreement was singled out and so we cannot
afford to make such a mistake again.
“I want to make it categorically clear
that until this whole agreement is fully implemented, we are not going
to call off this strike.”
The university lecturers have since June
30 embarked on what they described as a “total, comprehensive and
indefinite strike in public universities across the country.”
Members of the union had before now,
been holding deliberations with representatives of government, headed by
Governor Gabriel Suswam of Benue State on ways of resolving the strike.
Fagge explained that both the government
and ASUU had presented their demands in 2006 and after three years of
negotiations, the parties succeeded in reaching an agreement in 2009.
According to the ASUU president,
agreements are not negotiable and that is why the union is insisting on
the implementation of the agreements.
He said that members of the union were determined to prosecute the strike to its logical conclusion.
Fagge said that the implementation of
the agreement was a cardinal issue that must be accomplished by the
union as this would give the much needed impetus for transforming the
country’s ivory towers.
He noted that this would not only
transform the universities but would equally make Nigeria visible on the
global radar of development.
He stressed that the struggle was not
just to re-position the education sector, particularly the university
system, but to salvage the country.
He said that members of academia had
taken it upon themselves to reposition the country, so that within the
shortest possible time, Nigeria would find itself amongst the comity of
nations that would be adjudged by the international community as
developed.
Fagge, however, regretted that contrary
to subsisting operational procedures, about 75 per cent of the fund
meant for the revitalisation of the universities were not going to be
released directly to the union.
He said that the Suswanm-led committee
planned to hand it over to the National Universities Commission for
implementation, saying that this was “unacceptable”.
“Until and unless the Suswam committee
gives the union a guarantee that it will not serve as another means of
recycling TETFUND money or divert funds meant for universities, ASUU
representatives will not continue to participate in the deliberation of
the committee,” he said.
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