BY: News Peddlers
President
of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Professor Emmanuel Osodeke,
blasted the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, over his
attitude toward the strike embarked by university lecturers on Thursday.
“What
the Minister of Labour has done is a complete insult to the character of people
like Professor Nimi Briggs, Senator Chris Adighije, Professor Olu Obafemi,”
Professor Osodeke, said during an appearance on Sunrise Daily.
“The
minister instead of looking for how to resolve the problem is busy abusing his
colleagues, abusing even the Minister of Education.”
In
the months since the strike commenced February 14, efforts to resolve it
including protests by students have yielded no results with the Minister of
Labour and Employment and the union engaging in a war of words every now and
then.
Both
sides are now accusing each other of misinformation.
On
Wednesday, Dr Ngige put out a statement saying that there is no collective
bargaining agreement between the Federal Government and ASUU.
“This clarification has
become necessary in view of the deluge of deliberate misinformation being
dished out to Nigerians by the President of ASUU, Prof. Osodeke as well as his
branch leaders, calling on President Buhari to sign an agreement which they
claimed to have reached with the Federal Government,” a statement by the
ministry’s spokesperson, Olajide Oshundun, read in part.
Professor
Osodoke, however, fired back on Sunrise Daily on Channels TV.
“It
is so sad that we have gotten to a stage where our children are lamenting at
home and the Minister of Labour is busy churning out fake information and
misinforming the public, trying to undermine the integrity of ASUU,” he said.
Challenging Dr Ngige to show Nigerians proof of a claim that his delegation was walk
ed out
of a meeting with ASUU members.
The
ASUU President said Ngige resorted to fake news having failed to force the
striking members to call off the strike by withholding their salary for five
months.
ASUU
had on February 14, 2022, embarked on industrial action, accusing the Federal
Government of failing to meet its demands.
Some
of the demands include the release of revitalisation funds for universities,
renegotiation of the ASUU-FGN 2009 agreement, deployment of the University
Transparency Accountability System for the payment of salaries and allowances
of lecturers, and the release of the white paper report of the visitation
panels to universities among others.
SOURCE:
CHANNELS