ASUU STRIKE: RESOLVE ALL ISSUES TODAY, BUHARI ORDERS NGIGE
President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered the
Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, to end the three-month-old
strike by Nigerian university teachers at the ongoing meeting with the
teachers.
Mr Ngige disclosed this in a statement issued
during the resumed negotiation with the leadership of the Academic Staff Union
of Universities (ASUU) on Monday.
The statement by the Assistant Director,
Press at the ministry, Rhoda Illiya, said the president told the minister that
the strike must be called off at the end of the meeting on Monday.
The university lecturers embarked on an
indefinite strike on November 4, demanding improved funding of universities and
implementation of previous agreements with the government.
“Mr President has directed me to pass the
night here until all issues that have kept our children away from school are
resolved and the strike called off.
“The president has also directed me to
impress upon you, the imperative of little sacrifice from all sides, knowing
fully well that the revenue of the Federation has dwindled from what it was
before the present administration assumed office,” Mr Ngige said.
He said the president was concerned by the
prevailing crisis in the university system, hence his steady commitment to a
“holistic approach to tackling the rot through adequate funding,
notwithstanding the dwindling accruals.
“The president told me to assure you of his
determination to reposition our universities as he would do everything possible
to cast the present challenges in our tertiary education to the dustbin of
history,” the minister said.
Meanwhile, PREMIUM TIMES had reported the
union asking the government to release N50 billion to demonstrate its
commitment to the revitalisation of public universities, in line with previous
agreements with them.
The striking lecturers gave this as one of
the conditions for calling off the strike.
The ASUU delegation arrived for Monday’s
negotiation at the ministry some minutes before 4:00 p.m.
The meeting which is holding at the Federal
Ministry of Labour and Employment, Abuja is not the first since the beginning
of the strike.
Prior to Monday’s meeting, the two parties
held at least six other meetings.
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