University lecturers, under the auspices of Academic Staff
Union of Universities, ASUU, yesterday, denied any knowledge of the N200
billion said to have been deposited at the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, by
Federal Government, as a way of resolving the six months old strike which had
paralysed academic activities in the nation’s universities.
ASUU also lamented that government was fond of rushing to
the media with propaganda and falsehood, instead of resolving the contentious
issues headlong, and vowed to continue with the strike until it was officially
notified about the payment.
Meanwhile, Arewa Consultative Forum, ACF, and former
Chairman of the Enugu State Council of Traditional Rulers, Igwe Simeon Itodo,
yesterday appealed to ASUU members to call off the strike in the interest of
students, parents and the educational system in the country.
Addressing newsmen in Abuja Wednesday, Senior Special
Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, asked ASUU to
call its members back to work, since government had fulfilled its own part of
the bargain, by paying the said amount into CBN.
According to him, the office of the Accountant-General of
the Federation had authorised the payment of the money into CBN via a letter
with reference number FD/OAGF/220/ ADC/1/4DF, dated November 13.
Okupe said the money was paid into a ‘Revitalisation of
Universities Infrastructural Account’ with the CBN.
However, speaking in a telephone interview with Vanguard
yesterday, Chairman of ASUU at the University of Ibadan, Dr. Segun Ajiboye,
said the union would continue with the strike as government was yet to
officially notify it, detailing the evidence of such payment.
He said: “We read in the papers today (yesterday), that
government has presented proof of the N200 billion deposited to in a CBN
account for the funding of universities and therefore that we must call-off the
strike or face sack.
No evidence— ASUU
“As I speak to you, we are yet to get any evidence of the
payment as claimed by government.
“Our union is still expecting an official reply of the
letter we wrote to the President through the Supervising Minister of Education
on November 22.
“It is very simple. All we request from the Federal
Government is to document all it said it has done and will do, and get it duly
signed by the Attorney-General of the Federation.
“When this is done, then we expect the Federal Government to
invite our union for a meeting so that the final document can be duly
recognised and signed by both parties.
“As a union of intellectuals, we see the government’s claims
as payment on pages of newspapers.”
Reacting to the extension of the sack threat deadline to
November 9, Ajiboye said: “The threat to sack over 30,000 lecturers is
laughable.
Our members are resolute to salvage the decadence in our
educational system. So, we are unperturbed by the threat.”
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