Strike: Negotiation between ASUU and FG Still at Deadlock?
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| Strike: Negotiation between ASUU, FG failed ― Investigation |
The
negotiation between the Federal Government and the leadership of the Academic
Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, to end the ongoing industrial action by the
lecturers is currently stalled because of the refusal of the government to pay
the withheld salaries of the workers through other means than the Integrated
Personnel and Payroll Information System, IPPIS, our correspondent has
gathered. ASUU is strongly opposed to the use of IPPIS as the payment platform
in the university system. University lecturers across the country, especially,
those owned by the FG, are owed between four and eight months salaries. It was
gathered that last Wednesday when the team from ASUU met with the government
delegation led by the Minister of Labour, Dr Chris Ngige, the parties could not
make any headway on how to pay the outstanding salaries. Speaking in a chat
with our correspondent on Sunday, the National President of ASUU, Prof. Biodun
Ogunyemi, said there was no way workers whose salaries were withheld could be
convinced to go back to work. “The first step to resolving the impasse is for
the government to pay the withheld salaries of our members. It is between four
and eight months.
“You cannot tell a person whose salaries have been seized unjustifiably to go
back to work. Moreover, the salaries must be paid through the normal channel,”
he said. When asked what the normal channel is, the ASUU boss said the
government knows the means with which it pays its workers not enrolled on
IPPIS. “Doing that would help in resolving other issues and make things return
to normal. But for the government to insist on IPPIS, there may be trouble
still. “They are yet to enrol over 70 per cent of our members on IPPIS. It will
take them between three to six months to do so. “They are setting a booby trap
saying we should enrol on IPPIS first and then they will migrate us to our own
University Transparency and Accountability System, UTAS, that is even
uneconomical when UTAS can be used to enrol us in a very short time,” he
explained.
When prodded that IPPIS issue was not one of the initial demands of the union,
Ogunyemi noted that as far back as 2013, ASUU felt IPPIS matter had been laid
to rest. “We rejected it then and nothing was said about it up until late last
year when they brought it up and insisted on us being part of it. We saw that
as a distraction since other more important issues were at stake, but now they
have thrown it into the front burner,” he stated. ASUU has been on strike since
late March this year over some issues such as the payment of Earned Academic
Allowances, revitalisation of the university system, setting up of Visitation
Panels to universities, fulfilling conditions included in the 2004 agreement
reached between the two sides among others.

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