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source: Naija News
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NASU, SSANU, NAAT fault allocation of funds
Normal life and academic
activities in Nigeria’s universities will be disrupted by workers’ industrial
action from today.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
The
three non-academic staff unions have declared a trade dispute over failure of
government to keep to the terms of its own agreement with the workers.
The
industrial action is coming at a time teachers, under the aegis of the Academic
Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), have returned to the classroom after a
series of disputes with the Federal Government over previously agreed welfare packages
and funding.
Non-teaching
staff are now raising the same issues. President of the Senior Staff
Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), Mr. Samson Igwoke, who also
chairs the Joint Action Committee of the three unions — comprising SSANU, the Non-Academic
Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU) and the National
Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) — said in Abuja yesterday that the
strike would begin in all Federal Government-owned universities today (Monday).
Igwoke
explained that government had not shown seriousness in addressing the same
issues that forced the workers to call an industrial action on September 11,
2017.
Chief
among the complaints lodged by the workers were government’s failure to
implement the December 5, 2016 judgment of the National Industrial Court on
university staff schools, payment of arrears of earned allowances, arrears of
salary shortfalls and funding.
The
unions said there were discrepancies in allocation of funds, a gap that was
“pointedly” brought to the attention of government but had not been
acknowledged by the Ministry of Education.
“For
the first time in the history of fund allocations to federal universities, the
ministry of Education allocated funds to both the universities and their unions,”
Igwoke alleged. He said, “There is disquiet among non-academic unions”
regarding the parameters used in arriving at the sharing formula.
For example
the unions wondered how the Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA) got ₦328
million, while the University of Ibadan was given ₦105 million (less than one
third of FUTA’s).There is even more disquiet on the fate of the University of
Lagos which was allocated ₦23 million.
“The
questions that the unions are asking are: Is the staff strength of non-teaching
staff in FUTA bigger than that of UI? Or is it that FUTA has 15 times the
number of non-teaching staff in University of Lagos?”
The
Federal Government had approved ₦23 billion for payment of arrears of earned
allowances of teaching and non-teaching staff in federal universities. It was
then agreed that the trade unions under JAC would update the templates already
given to the Implementation Monitoring Committee (IMC) and submit them to the
Federal Ministry of Education by Thursday September 21, 2017.
The
workers also explained that, two months after a memorandum of settlement was
signed, the situation that necessitated the strike in September remained
unchanged. In declaring the strike, the unions said: “Having considered the
sorry situation we find ourselves vis-a-vis the brazen injustice being meted
out to us and the refusal of Government to respect the contents of the
Memorandum of Terms of Settlements reached with our Unions on the September 20,
2017, we are constrained to inform you that effective 12.00 midnight of Sunday
3rd December 2017, the Joint Action Committee of NAAT, NASU and SSANU shall be
resuming its earlier suspended strike.
“The
strike action shall be comprehensive and total. There shall be no provision of
services, either on skeletal or ad hoc basis. This strike, like others before
it, is not our making or desire. No responsible union goes on strike without
considering its implications on the system. However, we find ourselves in a
sorry plight where strike appears to be the only option.”
The
unions had, in announcing the suspension of their previous industrial action on
September 21, 2017, given a one-month moratorium within which the Federal
Government should address their concerns or they would return to the trenches.
The three unions subsequently resumed work on Monday, September 25, 2017. Monday’s return to the path of war will halt academic work in universities as long as the industrial action lasts, especially as all academic records and home-keeping activities for teachers and students would be kept on hold.
The three unions subsequently resumed work on Monday, September 25, 2017. Monday’s return to the path of war will halt academic work in universities as long as the industrial action lasts, especially as all academic records and home-keeping activities for teachers and students would be kept on hold.
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