FG PAYS 200B TO CBN FOR ASUU
Barely
twenty four hours to the expiration of the 4 December ultimatum Federal
Government gave members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities
(ASUU) to resume classes or be sacked, the federal government this
morning bowed to one of the demands of the lecturers by paying N200
billion into an account opened with the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN.
Disclosing
this on Channels Television programme ‘Sunrise Daily’ this morning, Dr.
Doyin Okupe, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public
Affairs confirmed that the N200b demanded by ASUU to be paid into an
account with the CBN has been done. The amount is meant for renewal of
infrastructure facilities in public universities in the country.
But
ASUU President, Dr. Nasir Fage Isa, accused the government of being
insincere in its dealing with the striking lecturers. He urged the
government to respond to its letter demanding the fulfillment of some
conditions for it to call off the strike.
Okupe said that from
the government’s perspective, everything that needs to be done has been
done and whether the strike would be called off or not now lies in the
hands of the leadership of ASUU.
He said that most of the demands
of the Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universities, ASUU, have been
agreed upon at the 13-hour meeting they had with the President in
October.
“At the end of that meeting, the Government proposed
that everything that has been agreed should be put in a memorandum of
agreement and that the two parties should sign, but the leadership of
ASUU declined and said instead of that, they would rather have a letter
of comfort expressing everything that has been resolved therein, and
that will suffice for them.”
According to him, the Government
agreed to their request and issued the said letter based on the
agreement that the strike would be called off within 7 days. However,
this did not happen “in spite of the fact that the ASUU leadership
presented the letter of comfort to its chapters nationwide and a clear
majority of them endorsed the resolutions reached and actually were more
inclined towards calling off the strike.”
Dr. Okupe stressed
that the attitude of the ASUU leadership showed that the seed of discord
and evidence of bad faith already existed. “It is unfortunate that
somebody died but notwithstanding, that cannot be a justification for
delaying the implementation of an agreement for 21 or more days.
Reading
from the ‘Letter of Comfort’ issued by the Federal Government in
agreement with the leadership of ASUU, the government agreed that
Nigerian universities must be revitalized for effective service
delivery, all the provisions in the agreement and MoU for the
revitalization shall be fully implemented as captured in the 2012 Needs
Assessment and the Federal Government shall mobilize resource towards
this goal.
“Based on this, it was also agreed that a sum of N1.3
trillion shall be made available to ASUU over the next six years
starting from December 2013 with (the sum of) N200 billion. The FGN
therefore request that the ASUU shall within 7 days call off its 4 month
strike.”
Contrary to the Federal Government’s expectation that
ASUU would call off the strike, ASUU in another document said that they
“could not call off the strike because of certain uncertainties or gaps
that are evident in the government’s report.”
Okupe asked
fiercely, “what are these uncertainties? He accused ASUU of turning
around to again state four new conditions for the strike to be called
off. They demanded that the agreed N200 billion should be deposited in
an account at the Central Bank within 2 weeks, while the negotiation of
the 2009 agreement should be included in the final document.
The
ASUU, according to Okupe also demanded that a non-victimization clause
should be included as well as a new MoU signed by the Attorney-General.
Dismissing
their requests, he said a demand for a memorandum is a waste of
people’s time because this is ideally what should follow any agreement
made between two parties in the first place, and that by International
Labour Laws which Nigeria is guided by, no one is expected to be
victimized for going on strike.
He also said that ASUU, asking
that the MoU with Federal Government should be signed by the
Attorney-General “does not make sense” because anyone of high standing
in government can sign for it. He added that an account has already been
opened for the N200 billion they are requesting for in the Central
Bank.
Okupe added that the government has shown commitment by
meeting with the leadership of ASUU, and agreeing to its demands,
considering that previous governments did not give them such an
opportunity to sit down and discuss. He called on ASUU to do the right
thing for the benefit of the nation.
“The Government cannot be
seen to be contesting with any sector of the economy or the country.
This President is interested in moving Nigeria forward through a very
well-articulated transformation agenda.”
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