ASUU will not be shutting down university gates tomorrow says Dr. Dele Ashiru, a member of the National Executive Committee of the union.
Newsonline reports that the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, is not embarking on industrial action from Tuesday, a member of the National Executive Committee, NEC, of the union has said.
BREAKING: ASUU Embarks On Fresh Nationwide Strike Tuesday
The NEC member, who is also the Chairman of the University of Lagos, UNILAG, chapter, Dr. Dele Ashiru, in a chat with Vanguard on Monday, explained that there are steps and processes for the union to embark on strike.
He, however, agreed that the union gave the Federal Government up till Tuesday, August 31, to meet some demands.
According to Ashiru, “Yes, we gave the government till the end of this month to meet some demands of ours.
“However, assuming that the demands are not met within the stipulated period, we won’t just begin an industrial action that same day.
“The reason is that ASUU is not a one-man union and is not run like a one-man show. If the demands are not met, the national leadership would call a meeting of NEC and report back to it.
“It is at that NEC meeting that the next step would be decided on. As we talk now, no NEC meeting has been called and so the likelihood of a strike starting on Tuesday is not there.
“Our demands from the government are just three. We want the government to sign and implement the renegotiated agreement we have with them;
“That the government should also mainstream our Academic Earned Allowances and to pay the N40 billion Revitalisation Fund,” he explained.
Recall that the union and the FG had a face-off that led to a nine-month strike by ASUU last year.
The strike was called off last December, but up until now most of the promises made by the government are yet to be fulfilled.
Other issues that the union wants the government to address are the implementation of the Integrated Personnel Payroll and Information System, IPPIS, and the proliferation of universities, especially by state governments in the face of poor funding.