The ASUU National President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, disclosed
this in an interview with The PUNCH.
Ogunyemi told The PUNCH that the Federal Government was not
sincere about negotiations with the union, adding that lecturers would not
resume on an empty stomach.
He specifically took a swipe at the Accountant General of the
Federation, Ahmed Idris, for violating a directive of the President, Muhammadu
Buhari, that lecturers’ salaries should
be paid, adding that Nigerians should be ready for a long-drawn strike in
universities with the way government was handling negotiations.
He said: “You can’t expect people to go back to their offices on
an empty stomach.
“You don’t expect my members to suspend this action when their
demands have not been met.
“It is a very clear decision that anybody will make in this
circumstance.”
The main crux of the face-off between the Federal Government and
ASUU has been over the payment solution to use for universities.
While the Federal Government said like other workers on its
payroll, the ASUU should key into the Integrated Payroll and Personnel
Information System, the union wants the University Transparency Accountability
Solution, which it designed, adopted.
Owing to this disagreement, the lecturers that submitted their
details had been captured on the IPPIS and paid their salaries till date,
though some complained about discrepancies.
However, those who are not on the IPPIS are being owed about
three months salaries.
Ogunyemi, however, told The PUNCH that the Federal Government
had not allowed it to even demonstrate how the UTAS works.
He said on August 18, ASUU wrote the Federal Government on the
issue but did not receive any reply until September 30.
He said: “They said they were considering our requests for a
meeting.
“Mainly, we raised two points in the letter we wrote to them:
that we are ready to demonstrate our platform, which is the alternative to the
IPPIS.
“We had earlier presented it to the Ministry of Education,
although we told the Ministry of Labour that they should facilitate
presentation to other stakeholders, particularly the Office of the Accountant
General of the Federation.
“It is from there we are being dribbled.”
Ogunyemi said their salaries are being withheld contrary to the
directive of President Buhari.
He said: “The AGF has withheld salaries of our members.
“The salaries withheld range from three months to eight months
and I don’t think that is good negotiation.
“If you think you can use hunger as a weapon of war against
Nigerian academics, it means the government is not sincere about building an
enviable university system in Nigeria.
“All these games of arm-twisting, intimidation and manipulation
will not take them far and that is why we want Nigerians to prevail on the AGF
to stop this attack on our members.
“He is using hunger as a weapon of war and he should get ready
to be tried for genocide.
“We have reasons to believe they are trying to frustrate the new
platform we have developed and we are not going to take that kindly because we
used the contributions of our members to develop that platform.
“We didn’t take a kobo from government because we thought we
should demonstrate patriotism.
“I want to assure Nigerians that while the AGF may claim that he
is achieving his objectives by humiliating some lecturers, we have a vast
majority of our lecturers who are resolute and they are ready and steady in the
ongoing struggle and at the appropriate time the showdown will come and
Nigerians will see the truth about what is behind the IPPIS.”
But the Minister of State for Education, Chukwuemeka Nwajiuba,
told The PUNCH that all lecturers had migrated to the IPPIS.
Nwajiuba said: “I think every ASUU member has been paid.
“They received their last salary in July, which was the period
transfers were made last.
“What they haven’t received are their August and September
salaries.
“You remember that the President gave a directive that they
should be paid, so they submitted their details, which were then used to
migrate them to the IPPIS.
“So while they were still protesting that they didn’t want to be
on the IPPIS, the IPPIS platform accommodated and paid them.
“Even when they were on strike, we kept paying them.
“We paid in March, April, May, June and July.
“They are now on the IPPIS because during the period of the
lockdown, there was no other way to pay them.
“When they gave us their bank verification numbers, we migrated
them to the IPPIS and we are now paying them on the IPPIS.”
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