VARSITY teachers have agreed to suspend their five months old strike, The Nation learnt yesterday.
The
Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has given three conditions
to be tabled before President Goodluck Jonathan today. If the terms are
acceptable to the Federal Government, the union will call off the
strike.
The ASUU leadership has banned its local chapters and zonal
chairmen from talking to the media until after the session with the
President.
ASUU President Dr. Nasir Issa Fagge and other leaders of the union were being expected in Abuja last night.
According
to a source, who was part of the ASUU session at Mambayya House in
Kano, the conditions are: •commitment from the President that any review
or reconsideration or renegotiation of the 2009 Agreement will not
substantially affect the pact which is the cause of the ongoing strike;
•immediate payment of all outstanding salary arrears and allowances of varsity teachers without victimization; and
•a
written commitment from the President that the Federal Government will
commit N225billion annually to the funding of universities for the next
four years.
There is a fourth condition, which is said to be
“personal” to ASUU, bordering on the need to be wary of gradual loss of
public sympathy.
The union leaders were said to have recognised
public goodwill for the strike and the need to avert any action that
could erode such confidence.
The source said: “Our leaders are
meeting with the President on Monday to table these conditions. Once the
President accepts these three terms, the strike will be called off.
“In
principle, members voted about 60-40 per cent to call off the strike,
but they added a caveat – that ASUU leaders should extract a commitment
(signed and sealed) from the President.
The union is said to have
insisted on the three conditions because during talks with the Federal
Government, it was apparent that the government wanted a renegotiation
of the 2009 Agreement.
“
If ASUU had accepted to renegotiate the
entire Agreement , it means there will be no basis for the ongoing
strike. The worst that can happen is either having the abridged version
of the 2009 Agreement or a phased implementation of the document,” the
source added.
The Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA),
Ondo State became at the weekend the third institution to break ranks
with the striking union.
It asked its students to return to the
campus today. Lecture are to start on December 2, according to the
Registrar, Mr. Bamidele Olotu.
Enugu State University of Technology
(ESUT), Enugu, and the Ibrahim Badamosi University, Lapai, in Niger
State had earlier directed the reopening of the schools.
The registrar directed students to begin their registration on the school portal immediately.
AAUA
Student Union President Julius Adeniyi welcomed the resumption plan and
assured his fellow students of a hitch-free semester.
He said: “We
are dying and wasting away our time at home; and I am backing my Vice
Chancellor on the resumption date. We are coming in and nothing will
happen.”
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