ASUU Strike: FG Meets Lecturers, NLC Today Over Strike, Planned Protest
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The Minister of Labour and
Employment, Chris Ngige will lead the federal government team, including the Ministers
of Finance and that of the National Budget and Planning to a crucial meeting
today with the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC) and
other labour unions, as part of his efforts to avert the planned industrial
action by the labour over the delay in the implementation of the recommended
new minimum wage.
ASUU-FG negotiation meeting |
The federal government
negotiating team will also hold another round of discussions with the
leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in a bid to
resolve their differences and reopen the country’s public tertiary institutions
that have been shut down in the past one month.
The issue in contention between
the federal government and the organised labour movement is the N30,000 new
national minimum wage, which the organised labour is demanding that the bill be
forwarded to the National Assembly for enactment.
Instead of forwarding the bill,
the federal government had said it would subject the report of the tripartite
committee on minimum wage to a further scrutiny by a technical committee.
On its part, the organised
labour had reacted to what it described as undue delay tactics by the federal
government, threatening to embark on nationwide protest beginning from Tuesday.
A meeting was recently held
between the government team and with the labour movement, represented by the
NLC and TUC but it ended inconclusive.
Addressing journalists at the
end of the meeting last Friday, Ngige said the issues were not conclusively
dealt with.
He said although significant
progress has been made in getting labour to understand the position of the
government, there was the need for another round of talks today to agree on the
period for the transmission of the
National Minimum Wage Bill to the legislature.
“No, the meeting is not
deadlocked, we are continuing on Monday (today). We have made substantial
progress in our talks with labour in
terms of the transmission of the New National Minimum Wage Bill to the National
Assembly,” Ngige said.
Also speaking on the outcome of
the meeting, the NLC President, Ayuba Wabba, said the meeting was inconclusive
as there were still some physical issues that needed to be concluded when they
reconvene today.
According to Wabba, “We have had a social dialogue bothering on
the national minimum wage, as you are aware; and the meeting decided to adjourn
and reconvene on Monday for us to do further consultations before the issues
are concluded.’’
He said the issue at stake is
to make sure that the minimum wage bill is transmitted, including other
auxiliary issues that government said they were trying to put together.
In the case of ASUU, the union
is currently on an industrial action, which has stretched for over one month.
ASUU had on November 4, 2018,
embarked on nationwide strike over unfulfilled past agreements by the federal
government.
Since the lecturers downed
tools, several meetings have ended in deadlock, with the President of ASUU,
Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, and other leaders of the union insist that the federal
government must fulfil agreements reached with the union in 2009, 2013 and
2017.
While decrying the decay in
infrastructure and equipment in public universities, ASUU had demanded N1.1
trillion to fund the university system, while condemning the failure by the
federal government to pay the arrears of the shortfall in their salaries
The last meeting between the
federal government team and the ASUU delegation ended in a deadlock, with the
lecturers expressing dissatisfaction.
As for the dissatisfaction
shown by ASUU leaders, Ngige said: “As a union leader, if one doesn’t get 100
per cent of what he wants, you won’t expect him to be smiling. Any meeting that
you see people smiling, you know that somebody has cheated the other.’’
See also: ThisDayLive.com
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