ASUU Strike: FG, ASUU Set To Meet On Monday
;
The Federal Government will
meet with the Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universities (ASUU) on Monday
Dec.10, over the ongoing nationwide strike.
ASUU strike |
The Minister of Labour and
Employment, Chris Ngige, made this known in a statement signed by the Director of
Press in the Ministry, Mr Samuel Olowookere, in Abuja.
Ngige said that all further
discussions between the Ministry of Education and ASUU would now reconvene at 4
p.m.at the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment.
The Minister also condemned a
statement credited to a Human Rights Lawyer, Mr Femi Falana who was alleged to
have described as illegal the enforcement of section 43:1 of the Trade Dispute
Act 2004 on the’’ No Work No Pay’’
Falana was also said to have
asked the federal government to immediately withdraw what he termed an “illegal
order”.
The minister, however, said
that the law of ‘’No Work, No Pay,’’ was a fundamental axiom in labour and
industrial relations all over the world.
He said that the ministry would
investigate the media report credited to Falana to ascertain whether he
actually quoted the Supreme Court judgments.
“That is knowing that they are
tangential and that they neither anchor nor dwell on provisions of section 43
of Trade Dispute Act T8(LFN 2004) before it will take further necessary action,
” he said.
NAN reports that on Dec, 4, the
meeting between the Federal Government and ASUU ended without any conclusio.
Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, ASUU
National President, while speaking with newsmen at the end of the closed door
meeting in Abuja noted that negotiations were still ongoing. He said both
parties were yet to reach a concrete decision.
“For now, we have started to
discuss. We are yet to reach any concrete decision. Once we have more
information, we will make ourselves available to the press.
“The union will reconvene very
soon to continue negotiations,” he said.
The meeting held at the
instance of the Minister of Education, Malam Adamu Adamu was to find lasting
solution to the ongoing strike by the university lecturers.
ASUU had on Nov. 4, embarked on
an indefinite strike over poor funding of Nigerian universities and
non-implementation of previous agreements by government.
Meanwhile, the President,
National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Mr Danielson Akpan has urged
both parties to have a common ground so that the universities can reopen.
He said they must put the
interest of the country and Nigerian students above any other thing. (NAN)
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