The Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, University of Uyo branch, on Wednesday, issued a two-week ultimatum to the Federal Government to honour the 2009 renegotiated agreement it had with the union or risk industrial action.
In a public sensitization protest on Wednesday at the
University of Uyo town campus, the Chairperson of ASUU, Prof Opeyemi Olajide,
recalled that in 2022, public universities embarked on eight months strike over
the outstanding issues and had to come back to classrooms in obedience to the
rule of law.
He expressed regrets that two years after, the Federal
Government is not willing to honour the agreement and attend to their demands.
The chairperson explained that the union reached out to
relevant authorities to intervene and make government do the needful to avert
any disruption to academic activities, but, there was no positive result
stressing that if after two weeks nothing was done, the union will shut down
the universities and send the students home.
He said, “In year 2022, ASUU was on strike for eight months,
public universities in Nigeria were shut down, students were sent home because
federal government of Nigeria refused to address ASUU demands as contained in
renegotiated 2009 agreement which Academic Staff Unions of Nigerian
Universities had with them.
“ASUU suspended the strike because our union is very civil,
law abiding and has respect for rule of law. This is two years after, the
Federal Government has refused to sign that agreement with our union.
“We are telling government and the public that if in the
next two weeks nothing is done, ASUU is going to embark on yet another strike
and students will be sent home.”
The Zonal Coordinator of ASUU, Calabar Zone, Dr Happiness
Uduk, addressing the protest, disclosed that the Federal Government still owe
lecturers in public schools three and half months salary.
She noted that public universities are not functional as
expected when compared with the private universities urging the Federal
Government to make deliberate efforts to resuscitate public educational system.
“Enough is enough! the government is not taking care of
public institutions yet they are establishing their own private universities
where they are taking our resources to, where they are taking our tax payers
monies to.
“Federal Government has about two weeks to do something and
if not so, ASUU will down tools, that is what we want to tell people that it is
not well with us.
“The Federal Government has not treated us well and to say
the least, we are very hungry, whatever we are getting is not taking us home,
we are requesting government to pay us what they owe us, we are calling on
government to make the university system functional, we are asking government
to pay us our EAA, they should carter for universities they brought and not to
bring up more universities without taking care of them.”
On his part, the former Zonal Coordinator of ASUU, Prof
Aniekan Brown, said the union over the years had been clamouring for “education
for all”.
He noted that the workload of lecturers is not commensurate
with their pay and called for salary increments.
Brown lamented that despite the meager and static salaries,
the rate of taxation by the Federal Government was unbearable as a lecturer
pays up to 90 percent of his/her salary as tax.