University teachers are seeking audience with President Goodluck Jonathan.
They delivered yesterday a letter containing the request to the Supervising Minister for Education, Chief. Nyesom Wike.
Also,
top leaders of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), led by
National President, Dr. Nasir Issa Fagge, converged yesterday on Abuja
for the last stage of discussions with the Federal Government.
The
leaders were awaiting the President’s invitation on the three conditions
they tabled for the almost five -month strike to be called off.
The conditions are:
•
commitment from the President that any review or reconsideration or
renegotiation of the 2009 Agreement will not substantially affect the
Agreement which is the cause of the ongoing strike;
• immediate payment of all outstanding salary arrears and allowances of varsity teachers without victimisation; 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.
ASUU’s letter was delivered to the Minister through its Liaison Officer in Abuja.
But the minister has described the demand as outrageous.
Wike
said: “I will have to see Mr. President to see how the government can
go about this development, which is not favourable. It is outrageous.
ASUU is now making fresh demands and this will definitely need further
discussion.”
In the letter, the union demanded that it would want the
last tranche of the negotiation with the Federal Government to be
witnessed by President of the Nigeria Labour Congress(NLC) Abduwaheed
Omar and Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice
Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN).
A top source, who spoke in confidence
with our correspondent, said ASUU leaders were determined to see that
any agreement with the Federal Government has legal binding.
The
source said: “ASUU leaders are not ready to take anything for granted
this time around; every clause in whatever is agreed upon will have
legal effect on the two parties.
“This is why ASUU leaders have asked
for the NLC President and the AGF to be present. They do not want a
situation where the government will deny such agreement in the near
future.
“It was amazing how the government had been faulting the 2009
Agreement, which it was part of. This shows that ASUU must be extremely
careful.”
There were indications also that the Federal Government was also firming up its position on the conditions set by ASUU.
A
Presidency source said: “The government is also weighing options on the
demands of ASUU especially the aspects relating to financial
commitment.
“You know, what the government spends has to depend on
what it earns. If there is a binding financial commitment and there is
global recession in the oil industry, will government now look for money
at all cost?
“This is one grey area of the pending agreement on which the two parties must reach a compromise.”
A
source close to ASUU however said varsity students may stay at home
till next year when the government will be ready to meet the union’s
demand.
The source said the government’s plan is to deceive ASUU into calling off the strike and still not implement the 2009 agreement.
“ASUU
will not chicken out of its fight. The death of Iyayi has further
deepened our resolve to ensure that government implements the 2009
agreement. This fight is for the university community and not for ASUU.
Many people are insinuating that we are fighting for the 2009 to be
implemented to favour ASUU. They can say whatever they like that will
not deter us.
”Government knows what to do. But people in the same
government are mismanaging public funds which can be used to implement
the said FG/ASUU agreement. Many of us at the ASUU session at Mambayya
House in Kano resolved that government must meet the 2009 agreement.”
Wike yesterday condemned new conditions which the union insists must be met before a truce could be achieved.
Wike spoke during his meeting with Commissioners of Education in Abuja.
He confirmed that ASUU had given new conditions to call off the strike.
The
Minister at the meeting with the commissioners assured them of the
readiness of the Federal Government to support state governments in the
development of education.
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