President
Goodluck Jonathan says the strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff
Union of Universities since July 1, 2013 over the non-implementation of
2009 agreement with the Federal Government is no longer a trade dispute
but a subversive action.
Jonathan said this at the Peoples
Democratic Party state caucus meeting at the Government House, Yenagoa.
The meeting, presided over by the party chairman in the state, Col.
Samuel Inokoba (retd), started late on Friday and ended on Saturday.
The President was reacting to a plea by a
former governor of the state, Mr. Diepreye Alamieyesigha, on the
December 4 deadline given to ASUU to call off its strike or be sacked.
Alamieyesigha noted that the same date
was fixed for the burial of late Prof. Festus Iyayi, who died in a road
accident in Kogi State on November 12, en route Kano for the national
executive council.
The NEC meeting was meant to deliberate
on the latest government offer after meeting with Jonathan on November 4
to the early hours of November 5.
The former governor, who is also the
Chairman Elders Advisory Forum in the state, urged the President to
reconsider the date in order not to be seen as insensitive.
President Jonathan said despite holding
the longest meeting in his political career with all the highest
officers in his administration present including the Vice-President,
Minister of Finance, Minister of Labour, Minister of Justice, the
Secretary to the Government and the delegation from the Nigeria Labour
Congress, ASUU did not deem it fit to reconsider its stance.
Jonathan said, “What ASUU is doing is no
longer trade union. I have intervened in other labour issues before
now, once I invite them, they respond and after the meeting they take
decision and call off the strike.
“At times, we don’t even give them a
long notice unlike in the case of ASUU that was given four days notice
before the meeting. As you are meeting to resolve trade disputes, you
expect the trade unions to get their officials ready. What was expected
having met with the highest authorities in the land for long hours, was
for ASUU to immediately issue a statement within 12 or latest 24 hours
to state their position whether they were accepting government’s offer
or not. And if they are not accepting, they state the reason for that.
“But despite the fact that I had the
longest meeting with ASUU in my political history, we did not start that
meeting until around 2 pm and the meeting ended the next day in the
early hours of the morning. As far as the government of Nigeria was
concerned, all the critical people that should be in a meeting were
there, so what else do they want?
He added, “After that, they didn’t meet
until one week, despite the fact that you met with the highest
authority. It was unfortunate one of them, Prof. Iyayi died.
“The way ASUU has conducted the matter
shows they are extreme and when Iyayi died, they now said the strike was
now indefinite, our children have been at home for over five months.
“We didn’t give them ultimatum; it was
the Committee of Vice Chancellors that took that decision. The
supervising minister of education only passed on the decision. What ASUU
is doing is no longer trade dispute but subversive action. But like you
rightly noted so that we will not be perceived to be insensitive, we
will consult on the deadline.”
The Federal Government had on Thursday given ASUU one week ultimatum to call off strike or consider themselves sacked.
Meanwhile,the Academic Staff Union of Universities has dared the Federal Government to reopen the universities.
The ASUU chairman at the Obafemi
Awolowo University, Ile Ife, Prof. Adegbola Akinola, said this in an
interview with our correspondent in Osogbo on Friday.
The ASUU chairman said members of the union were unfazed by the deployment of troops to varsities.
The don said he was not sure that the
Supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, had the consent of
President Goodluck Jonathan before issuing the ultimatum.
He stated that the union did not shut
the universities but just withdrew services of its members to press home
their demands that government should take steps to reverse the decay in
the public universities.
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