FG threatens ASUU with mass sack
The protracted dispute between the Federal Government and striking university lecturers took a new dimension yesterday when the Minister of Education issued a week’s ultimatum to the teachers to resume work or be sacked.
Mr. Nyesom Wike, who addressed a news conference in Abuja, ordered vice chancellors to re-open all federal universities immediately, and said lecturers who failed to resume by December 4 will lose their jobs.
He also directed the vice chancellors to place adverts for internal and external vacancies to fill the slots that may arise from the firing of recalcitrant lecturers.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has been on strike since July 1, demanding the implementation of a 2009 agreement signed with the government.
That agreement provided for better funding for universities and higher pay for lecturers, among others.
Two weeks ago, ASUU chapters in the universities voted for the end of the strike after debating government’s offer for phased implementation of the disputed agreement.
But instead of the national leaders to call off the strike, they wrote a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan demanding that the Federal Government should within two weeks begin injecting the pledged N200 billion into the universities.
ASUU further demanded that government should renegotiate the 2009 agreement by 2014 and the Attorney General of the Federation be made to be the signatory to the memorandum of understanding.
Government said these “fresh” demands were outrageous.
“It was becoming obvious that the union is taking the Presidency and Nigerians for a ride,” the Minister of Education said yesterday.
“Government has reviewed the entire situation and come to the conclusion that the continuation of the strike action is an attempt by ASUU to sabotage all the efforts to address the issues.
“As a responsible government, we cannot allow the continuous closure of our public universities for this length of time as this poses danger to the education system, the future of our youths and national development.”
He added: “Vice-Chancellors should ensure that staff who resume for work are provided with the enabling environment for academic and allied activities, any academic staff who fails to resume on or before 4 of December, 2013 automatically ceases to be a staff of the institution.”
In a reaction to the minister’s threats, ASUU president Nasir Fagge told Daily Trust yesterday that the union was awaiting a reply to a letter sent to President Jonathan.
He said the union had written to the president on the outcome of their national executive meeting which held in Kano to consider the government’s offer over the strike.
Mr. Nyesom Wike, who addressed a news conference in Abuja, ordered vice chancellors to re-open all federal universities immediately, and said lecturers who failed to resume by December 4 will lose their jobs.
He also directed the vice chancellors to place adverts for internal and external vacancies to fill the slots that may arise from the firing of recalcitrant lecturers.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has been on strike since July 1, demanding the implementation of a 2009 agreement signed with the government.
That agreement provided for better funding for universities and higher pay for lecturers, among others.
Two weeks ago, ASUU chapters in the universities voted for the end of the strike after debating government’s offer for phased implementation of the disputed agreement.
But instead of the national leaders to call off the strike, they wrote a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan demanding that the Federal Government should within two weeks begin injecting the pledged N200 billion into the universities.
ASUU further demanded that government should renegotiate the 2009 agreement by 2014 and the Attorney General of the Federation be made to be the signatory to the memorandum of understanding.
Government said these “fresh” demands were outrageous.
“It was becoming obvious that the union is taking the Presidency and Nigerians for a ride,” the Minister of Education said yesterday.
“Government has reviewed the entire situation and come to the conclusion that the continuation of the strike action is an attempt by ASUU to sabotage all the efforts to address the issues.
“As a responsible government, we cannot allow the continuous closure of our public universities for this length of time as this poses danger to the education system, the future of our youths and national development.”
He added: “Vice-Chancellors should ensure that staff who resume for work are provided with the enabling environment for academic and allied activities, any academic staff who fails to resume on or before 4 of December, 2013 automatically ceases to be a staff of the institution.”
In a reaction to the minister’s threats, ASUU president Nasir Fagge told Daily Trust yesterday that the union was awaiting a reply to a letter sent to President Jonathan.
He said the union had written to the president on the outcome of their national executive meeting which held in Kano to consider the government’s offer over the strike.
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