•Okays ₦464m vehicles for FRSC
The Federal Government
yesterday said it could not afford the ₦284 billion earned allowances being
demanded by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). Earned allowances are
the emoluments the lecturers are entitled to enhance academic productivity and
increase research output.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
The
Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige told reporters after the Federal
Executive Council (FEC) meeting presided over by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo
in Abuja that of the eight demands made by ASUU, the earned allowances could
not be trashed out “because everybody knows and agrees that we are in
recession. If we are in a recession, and you are asking us to pay you ₦284
billion, nobody will pay it because the money is not there.
“So,
they agreed and the National Assembly also agreed. But the government offered
them some amounts pending when we finish auditing of the first tranche of money
that has been given to them in that same area of earned allowances.”
Ngige,
who was joined by his Budget and National Planning as well as Information and
Culture counterparts, Udoma Udo Udoma and Lai Mohammed, said government
conceded to the union the right to exclude endowment funds that accrued to
universities from the Treasury Single Account (TSA).
He
added: “TSA makes for accountability. You pay in whatever you derive from
government funds, ask for it back and you get it. The only thing is that you
must do the paper work for the accountability aspect of it to be there and for
any institution, they should be able to look at first glance, see the monies
they have in account A, B or C at the CBN and know what they have.
“Government
agrees to ASUU’s demand but limited it to only endowment funds. But that
doesn’t also mean that at the end of the day, the university councils will not
have the right to audit such an account. That is really the only area that is
still contentious.”
Ngige
also disclosed that council approved purchase of 67 vehicles worth ₦464 million
to strengthen the capacity of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC).
He
specifically said 40 pick-up vehicles and 27 Peugeot 301 cars were approved to
boost the commission’s fleet.
According to him, all vehicles are to be sourced locally from Innoson Motors and Peugeot Automobile Nigeria (PAN) in line with the country’s Local Content and Procurement Act.
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