Tag: ASUU

  • Why ASUU may embark on strike, by union

    Why ASUU may embark on strike, by union

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), may embark on industrial action again if the federal government fails to release the  N170 billion in the 2023 budget  allocated for university revitalisation and address other pressing issues.

    Speaking at a press conference in Lagos at the weekend, the coordinator of ASUU Lagos zone, Prof. Adelaja Odukoya, reiterated the union’s call for increased government funding and attention for public universities.

    The Lagos Zone of ASUU consists of University of Lagos ( UNILAG),  the Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo; Tai Solarin University of Education (TASUED), Ijagun-Ijebu Ode; the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) Ago-Iwoye; the Lagos University of Science and Technology( LASUSTECH) Ikorodu; the Lagos University of Education( LASUED) Otto-Ijanikin; and the Federal University of Agriculture (FUNAAB) Abeokuta.

    Odukoya noted that some of the lingering issues which government had not addressed include the non-injection of revitalisation funds as agreed and also appropriated for in the 2023 Budget,  the proliferation of both federal and state universities without financial support, the prolonged delay in renegotiation of their 2009 Agreement, and the continuous use of “deceptive IPPIS” as  payment platform.

    Others according to him, are the continuous delay in the payment of their Earned Academic Allowances, the continuous use of Treasury Single Account (TSA) for university operations, the non-full payment of their eight-month withheld salaries, the non-recall of sacked ASUU officials at LASU five years ago, and the non-release of the university’s white paper on the 2021 Visitation Panel.

    On its withheld salary, the union condemned the “No-Work No-Pay” policy implemented during the previous administration, which left  lecturers without salaries for a long period. 

    Read Also: ASUU gives scholarship to students

    Though the union acknowledged partial payment, it described it a insufficient and insensitive with the current economic woes.

    The don urged President Bola Ahmed  Tinubu to address the issues urgently to avoid embarking on strike again.

    The union called on various stakeholders, including the media, labour movement, student organisations, and civil societies to support the academics towards improving the nation’s public university system.

  • FG can clear lecturers’ salary arrears once – ASUU

    FG can clear lecturers’ salary arrears once – ASUU

    The national president of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Emmanuel Osodeke, has emphasized that the federal government has the capacity to clear the approximately eight months’ salary arrears owed to lecturers in one fell swoop, thereby initiating a fresh financial start with the Union.

    Osodeke urged the government to establish tangible strategies for settling the salary arrears, emphasizing that the recent payment of two months salaries to lecturers out of the nearly eight months owed does not warrant celebration.

    He spoke to The Nation on the sideline of a three-day long ‘University-wide Seminar themed: The Demands of Scholarship in the 21st Century’ which entered its final day today, Thursday, February 22 at the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) Ago Iwoye, Ogun state.

    The programme was organised by the ASUU national body and OOU-ASUU local branch under the auspices of the Centre For Popular Education (CEPED) to sanitize members to understand that the ASUU struggle is not about salaries only but about quality university education for an egalitarian society, quality outputs, better funding and better Nigeria.

    No fewer than 12 indigent students of OOU received scholarship grants from the ASUU national body and OOU ASUU branch to cushion the effects of the current economic hardship in the country. While the ASUU gave grants of N200,000 each to two students, OOU – ASUU awarded N100,000 grants to each of 10 indigent students.

    He said the government had received more monies from FAAC in recent times and advised that part of it should be channelled towards paying the lecturers’ salary arrears.

    Osodeke said: “The government has the capacity to pay. This is a new government, the government is supposed to pay the backlog and start on a clean slate. We are academics, we see more than all Nigerians.  Nigeria has the money to pay if you look at July 2023, the government realised 1.9 trillion Naira to be shared by FAAC among states and local governments.

    “The government only shared one trillion and kept N900bn somewhere. We did the calculation, and the whole money (being owed to our members) is not more than N100 billion. Why can’t the government take that and settle us once and for all or decide that every two months we are going to take 10 or 20 billion to pay one month and that way the whole money would be paid.”

    Read Also: ASUU gives scholarship to students

    He however warned members against making the Union struggle look like a fight for salary and welfare only at the expense of better public universities and Nigeria generally.

    Osodeke reminded ASUU members that unions which made members’ salaries and welfare as the only and focal points of their struggles when they should have fought tenaciously for the survival, and efficiency of public institutions and systems, lost their jobs and welfare at the end of the day when those institutions collapsed.

    Citing some workers’ unions of moribund Nigeria Rail Ways, National Electric Power Authority (NEPA), and Nigeria Airways among others, the ASUU President said the workers lost their jobs as those public institutions buckled and collapsed, stressing that the unions in such places fought for the survival and preservation of the public institutions, they would have still been standing till today as national assets and employers of labour.

    He expressed concern over the practicability of the federal government students’ loan scheme to work in favour of ordinary Nigerians from modest backgrounds, saying given the stringent conditions for accessing the scheme, it is certain that it would end up serving the interest of children from already wealthy families.

    He said the requirement stipulating that a guarantor of such a credit scheme must be a level 12 officer, takes it away from the reach of poor students in public higher institutions across the country.

    He stated: “We need to educate our members we need to let them know why we are struggling and to let them know about the union. We also need to bring them up to the principle of the union. They need to know why we take some actions like strikes because we have some new members among us.

    “In my opening remarks, I said that look, immediately you start struggling for your salaries alone and the system dies, then you have no job again and that is why today, those things that we there in the 60s and 70s, were not there again. For instance, we used to have Nigeria Railways. Nigeria Railways is the best in Africa, but the workers left the system and were fighting for themselves and their salaries alone and today no railway again and they have lost their jobs but if they had been fighting for the system, fought to have Railways working from Calabar to Port Harcourt, Benin – Lagos, Kano Maiduguri and others working, their jobs would still be working and the union, would still be stronger.

    “Nigeria Airways too used to have a strong union but what do you have now and also see NEPA. NEPA left the institution and was fighting for themselves, today NEPA is no more. The same thing is happening to the Nigeria Union of Teachers NUT, the public primary schools and secondary schools are dead while private ones have taken over and when they are private, they do not unionise.

    “Go to private universities. None of the private universities in Nigeria are unionized. They are not unionised. Go to private universities and see what the lecturers are facing because they are not unionised. They are suffering but they cannot speak out. In fact, if you see what lecturers in private universities are facing, you will be shocked. That is why we are left to speak for the institution. All our hospitals are going the same way. In fact, go to our government hospitals, they are not what you can be proud of. That is why when you have some level of commitment, we must struggle for the system. That is why we talk of TETFUND and today, we have public universities and they account for more than 95 percent of the university population.

    “We still have the public universities working because of the fees and because of the environment where you are free to express yourself freely unlike when you still have to go to one church where the owner of the university that you must be a member of that church, where you must pay it and that is the difference.”

  • Don’t make salary affairs focus of ASUU’s struggles, Osodeke cautions members

    Don’t make salary affairs focus of ASUU’s struggles, Osodeke cautions members

    The National President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, has warned members of the union against making their struggle look like a fight for their salaries and welfare only.

    He said such a stance would make their struggle to look like they are fighting at the expense of having better public universities and nation.

    Osodeke reminded ASUU members that some unions which made their salaries and welfare the focus of their struggles when they should have fought perseveringly for the survival, continuity and efficiency of public institutions and system lost their jobs and welfare at the end of the day when such institutions collapsed.

    Citing some workers’ unions of moribund Nigerian Railways, National Electric Power Authority (NEPA), Nigeria Airways, among others, the ASUU president said the workers lost their jobs as those public institutions buckled and collapsed.

    Osodeke said this at a ‘University-wide seminar with the theme: The Demands of Scholarship in the 21st Century, at the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) in Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State.

    Read Also; Fed Govt completes Tincan port road

    The programme was organised by the ASUU national body and OOU branch of the union under the auspices of the Centre for Popular Education (CEPED) to enable members understand that the union’s struggles are not about salaries only but about quality university education for an egalitarian society with quality outputs, better funding and a better nation.

    No fewer than 12 indigent students of OOU got scholarship grants from ASUU national body and the university’s branch of the union to cushion the effects of the current economic hardship in the country.

    While ASUU gave grants of N200,000 each to two students, OOU – ASUU awarded N100,000 grants to each of the 10 indigent students.

    Osodeke said: “We need to educate our members. We need to let them know why we are struggling and to let them know about the union. We also need to bring them up to the principle of the union. They need to know why we take some actions, like strike, because we have some new members among us.

    “In my opening remarks, I said: ‘Immediately you start struggling for your salaries alone and the system dies, then you have no job again. That is why today, those things that we had in the 1960s and 1970s are not there again.’

    “For instance, we used to have the Nigeria Railways. It was the best in Africa. But the workers left the system and were fighting for themselves and were fighting for their salaries alone. Today, there is no railway again, and they have lost their jobs.”

    “But if they had been fighting for the system, fought to have the railways working from Calabar to Port Harcourt, Benin to Lagos, Kano to Maiduguri, and others, their jobs would still be working and the union would still be strong.

    “The Nigeria Airways too used to have a strong union, but what do you have now? Also, see the (defunct) NEPA. The union leaders left the institution and were fighting for themselves. Today, NEPA is no more.

    “The same thing is happening to the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT). The public primary and secondary schools are dead while private ones have taken over. When they are private, they do not unionise.

    “Go to private universities. None of the private universities in Nigeria is unionised. Go to private universities and see what the lecturers are facing because they are not unionised. They are suffering, but they cannot speak out. In fact, if you see what lecturers in private universities are facing, you will be shocked.

    “That is why we are left to speak for the institution. All our hospitals are going the same way. In fact, go to our government hospitals; they are not what you can be proud of. That is why when you have some level of commitment, we must struggle for the system. That is why we talk of the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund). Today, we have public universities and they account for more than 95 per cent of universities population.”

  • Fed Govt begins payment of ASUU’s withheld salaries

    Fed Govt begins payment of ASUU’s withheld salaries

    • NAAT, SSANU, NASU protest exclusion

    The Federal Government has begun the payment of withheld salaries of lecturers under the Academic Staff Union of University (ASUU).

    The Director Press in the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (OAGF), Mr. Bawa Mokwa, confirmed the development to The Nation yesterday in Abuja.

    Mokwa said the government released two months’ salary arrears to the affected lecturers at the weekend while another tranche of two months’ salary was slated to be released to them later yesterday.

    The director said the government had resolved to offset the eight months’ salary arrears of the university lecturers who embarked on an eight-month strike under former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The OAGF spokesman assured the lecturers that the remaining four months’ salary arrears would be settled but did not say when this happen.

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari invoked a “No Work, No Pay policy” against some university lecturers who embarked on a crippling strike that lasted eight months in 2022.

    Before the Federal Government started paying off the withheld salaries, members of ASUU, the umbrella body of public university lecturers, had threatened to embark on another strike, if the Federal Government failed to pay them their withheld salaries.

    Mokwa said only federal university lecturers captured into the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) platform were being paid.

    He added that state universities were the responsibility of their state governments.

    But ASUU Abuja Zone has decried the payment of “amputated two-month” salary to its members out of the seven and a half-month the Federal Government withheld.

    Its Zonal Coordinator Salahu Lawal announced this while addressing reporters yesterday in in Abuja.

    President Bola Tinubu had, last October, approved the release of four of the eight-month withheld ASUU members’ salaries.

    The union said despite the President’s order for the release and payment of their withheld salaries, some members had reported receiving an amputated two-month salaries.

    Lawal said: “This is far below the expectation of the union and further weakens the morale of our members and the union’s trust in government promises.

    “We use this medium to call on all that are involved in this inglorious act to do the needful with regard to lecturers’ withheld salaries as there is nothing more to prove.”

    He urged the Federal Government to conclude, sign and immediately implement the report of Prof. Nimi Briggs Committee on Renegotiated Agreement and immediately pay all the withheld salaries, promotion arrears and EAAs.

    Also, the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) has condemned the Federal Government’s plan to pay only ASUU members their withheld salaries over the 2022 strike.

    If the government pays only ASUU members, those of NAAT, the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) and the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions would be left out.

    Already, SSANU and NASU have written to the Chief of Staff to the President to protest their exclusion from the payment.

    Read Also: EFCC quizzes ex-Gov Ahmed over alleged diversion of N10bn

    In a statement by its President, Ibeji Nwokoma, and General Secretary, Abubakar Yusuf, the NAAT said the government’s action was unfair, unjust, and a recipe for an industrial crisis in the universities.

    The union said it was informed that the government directed the OAGF to effect the payment of the withheld salaries to only ASUU members, contrary to the pronouncement of the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, at a high-level stakeholders’ meeting on January 11.

    It said the minister had assured that the government had concluded arrangements on the payment of withheld salaries to all members of university-based unions in federal universities and the implementation of the new salary structure of 25 per cent and 35 per cent salary increase for all workers in tertiary institutions.

    The NAAT said the minister’s promise was at variance with the government’s action to pay only ASUU members the withheld salaries.

    This, the union said, was creating a charged atmosphere and preparing the ground for the disruption of academic activities on the campuses.

  • UPDATED: Fed govt pays ASUU four months withheld salaries

    UPDATED: Fed govt pays ASUU four months withheld salaries

    The federal government has commenced the payment of withheld salaries of lecturers under the Academic Staff Union of the University (ASUU).

    The Director of Press in the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (OAGF), Bawa Mokwa confirmed the development to The Nation on Monday, February 19.

    Mokwa said the federal government released two-month salary arrears to the affected lecturers over the weekend while another tranche of two-month salary will be released to the lecturers later on Monday.

    Read Also: Varsity unions spoil for war over payment of withheld ASUU salaries

    Mokwa disclosed that the federal government has resolved to offset the eight-month salary arrears of University lecturers who embarked on an eight-month strike during the tenure of former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The OAGF spokesman did not say when the remaining four months will be paid but he assured that the federal government will pay the lecturers.

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari invoked a ‘No Work, No Pay policy’ against some university lecturers who embarked on a crippling strike, that lasted for eight months in 2022.

    Before the federal government started paying off the withheld salaries, members of ASUU, the umbrella body of public university lecturers had threatened to embark on another strike if the federal government failed to pay them their withheld salaries.

    Mokwa also added that only federal university lecturers under the IPPIS platform were being paid while state universities are the responsibility of their respective state governments.

  • BREAKING: FG begins payment of ASUU’s withheld salaries

    BREAKING: FG begins payment of ASUU’s withheld salaries

    The Federal Government has commenced the payment of the withheld salaries of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    ASUU’s chairperson at the Federal University of Technology, Minna, Prof. Gbolahan Bolarin, who confirmed the development said: “Yes, it is true. Payment has started rolling in.”

    Read Also: Varsity unions spoil for war over payment of withheld ASUU salaries

    President Bola Tinubu in October 2023 approved the release of four of the eight months’ ASUU withheld salaries of the workers.

    The salaries were withheld when the administration of former President Muhammadu Buhari invoked a ‘No Work, No Pay policy’ against some university-based unions that embarked on a strike, which lasted eight months in 2022.

    Details shortly…

  • Varsity unions spoil for war over payment of withheld ASUU salaries

    Varsity unions spoil for war over payment of withheld ASUU salaries

    • SSANU, NASU kick over exclusion

    University unions may be heading for another round of industrial action that may disrupt academic activities with the alleged decision of the Federal Government to pay the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) the four months withheld salaries during the last strike.

    Already, the Joint Action Committee (JAC), of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) and the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU), have written to the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajiabiamila on the implications of the decision of the government to single out ASUU for the payment in exclusion of the other three unions.

    The protesting unions, NASU and SSANU are kicking against their exclusion from the payment.

    In a leaked memo to the Chief of Staff dated February 13, 2024, SSANU and NASU warned that if the government goes ahead with the exclusion policy, the two unions should not be held liable for any disruption in the academic calendar.

    The unions warned that as a result of the injustice done to its members by the government, it would be difficult to guarantee the peaceful atmosphere that is currently being experienced in the universities and inter-university centres.

    The unions appealed to the government to do the needful by paying its members four months’ outstanding salaries like their counterparts who are academic staff union members.

    The memo titled, ‘Protest letter over the exclusion of non-teaching staff from the payment of outstanding four months salaries,’ was signed by Prince Peters Adeyemi, General Secretary, NASU, and Comrade Mohammed Ibrahim, President, SSANU.

    Part of the protest letter reads: “We write to draw the attention of the Chief of Staff to the President to the privileged information at our disposal that directive has been given to the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation to direct the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System (IPPIS) Office to release four (4) months salaries out of the outstanding salaries owed the members of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) excluding other staff who belong to other Unions in the Universities and Inter-University Centres.

    Read Also: NANS tackles ASUU on students loan scheme

    “These other unions are the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU), and the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT).

    “It is quite unfortunate that in spite of the high hope and aspiration of our members as a result of a press release by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity on 20th October 2023, after the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting that the Federal Government under the leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has granted a waiver to the ‘No Work, No Pay’ to ASUU and other Educational Sector Unions.

    “It is in this respect therefore that we write to immediately call the attention of your exalted office to this impending unfair treatment of Non-Teaching staff in the Universities and Inter-University Centre against their Academic counterpart and to say unequivocally that being an Academic or Non-Teaching staff in a University or Inter-University Centres is a matter of choice of vocation and as such this indiscriminate and undue favouritism tilted toward the academic staff against the non-teaching staff should be halted by this Government in the interest of justice, fairness, and equity.”

  • NANS tackles ASUU on students loan scheme

    NANS tackles ASUU on students loan scheme

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS)  have disagreed with the assertion by the

    Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) that Federal Government’s student loan scheme would keep the beneficiaries perpetually indebted.

    ASUU  had also argued after its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Yenagoa, Bayelsa that the initiative would not allow universities to have enough funds to function effectively.

    But NANS  said that contrary to ASUU’s assertions, the scheme represents a ray of hope for many students, especially those facing financial hardship.

    It therefore advised the umbrella boy of university teachers not to interfere in the implementation of the scheme that would provide a ‘nobody’ access to higher education.

    :”If ASUU has any genuine concerns or reservations about the programme,  it should address them openly and transparently. It is time for ASUU to prioritise the interests of students and support initiatives that will benefit the entire student community,”  NANS Senate President   Akinteye  Babatunde, told The Nation yesterday.

    Read Also; ‘I would have loved Akeredolu to be alive to see me succeed him’

      Babatunde said it was disheartening for ASUU  to oppose a programme dedicated to providing much-needed relief to countless students.

    “ASUU’s attempts to speak on behalf of students regarding the Student Loan Programme are unwarranted and unacceptable. Students are perfectly capable of voicing their own opinions and advocating for their own interests. ASUU should not speak for students without consulting them directly,”  he added.

      ASUU had after its  NEC meeting said it was sceptical of the loan scheme because similar ones in better-managed economies failed.

     It wondered why the initiative would succeed in a clime where corruption, nepotism and other unsavoury tendencies killed the Education Bank project after over five years of its existence.

    The union stressed that if state and federal governments truly wanted to invest in the lives of Nigerian students, grants and scholarships should be made available to them while the Needs-Based Budgeting System should be restored to the university system for greater efficiency.

    ASUS also decried the dissolution of the governing councils of federal universities, saying it was dismayed by the continued attacks and erosion of the autonomy of public universities.

    It said: “Vice-chancellors, in connivance with the federal and state ministries of Education are illegally running the universities.

    “They have taken over the functions of the council through illegal contract awards, approval of promotions, and recruitments without following due process. NEC condemns these anomalies in strong terms. It calls on state and federal governments to reverse themselves where governing councils were dissolved without serving their terms and reconstitute councils whose tenures have expired.

    “Vice-chancellors are also strongly advised to stop taking matters meant for councils to the ministries or commissioners for approval; this has great consequences for the future of the universities.” 

    The union urged the federal and state governments to, as a matter of urgency, release all the withheld salaries and third-party deductions of academics to restore their fading hope in the university system and Nigeria as a country.

    It warned that to continue to ignore ASUU’s formal and informal demands in this respect is to invite an avoidable industrial crisis in the system.

    “NEC condemns in its entirety the wave of fee hikes without inputs of the victims across our campuses. Daily scandalous reports of stupendous funds diverted from government treasuries at state and Federal levels reinforce our belief that resources available to the country could support government-funded university education –without excessive pressures on parents as currently done,” ASUU added.

    The union said that if the Federal Government had kept fate with its Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) of 2013, which provided for N1.3 trillion over six years, many universities would have been restored to a level at which they could attract foreign students and become renowned for cutting-edge and transformative research.

    It urged the    Tinubu administration to urgently initiate moves to conduct another needs assessment to empirically verify the call for massive intervention in public universities

  • Beneficiaries of student loan will be in debt forever – ASUU

    Beneficiaries of student loan will be in debt forever – ASUU

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has stated that the proposed student loan scheme will keep students in perpetual debt.

    This was contained in a statement on Thursday after the union’s National Executive Council meeting at the Niger Delta University, Wilberforce Island, Bayelsa State.

    ASUU argued that the Students Loan Scheme,  being pushed by international money lending agencies like the International Monetary Fund and World Bank would deprive public universities of funds.

    The statement reads: “For the avoidance of doubt, the NEC of ASUU reiterated its rejection of the Students Loan Scheme which is being promoted by international money lending agencies such as IMF and World Bank.

    “Nigerians should be aware that the scheme is a way of starving public universities of funding and a ploy to divert public funds into private universities owned by politically exposed individuals and their friends.

    “NEC further observed that the students’ loan scheme will mortgage the entire university system and keep our promising students in perpetual indebtedness.

    “If the scheme could fail in some better-managed economies, there is no guarantee that it will succeed in Nigeria where unbridled corruption, nepotism, and other unsavoury tendencies conspired to kill the Education Bank project after over five years of its existence.”

    However, ASUU recommended that grants and scholarships be made available to students and the university system should reinstate the Needs-Based Budgeting System for increased efficiency if the State and Federal governments genuinely plan to uplift Nigerian students.

    Read Also: ASUU in A’Ibom varsity calls off planned strike after Governor Eno’s intervention

    Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, the National President of ASUU, stated in the statement that the union opposed the significant increase in school fees and maintained that money taken out of the government coffers ought to go toward funding universities instead.

    The body added: “NEC condemns in its entirety the wave of fee hike without inputs of the victims across our campuses.

    “Daily scandalous reports of stupendous funds diverted from government treasuries at state and Federal levels reinforce our belief that resources available to the country could support government-funded university education –without excessive pressures on parents as currently done.”

  • ASUU in A’Ibom varsity calls off planned strike after Governor Eno’s intervention

    ASUU in A’Ibom varsity calls off planned strike after Governor Eno’s intervention

    The planned strike by the Akwa Ibom State University (AKSU) branch of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has been called off.

    The ASUU took the decision not to proceed with the strike following a meeting between Governor Umo Eno and labour representatives from the university, held at the Government House in Uyo.

    The purpose of the meeting was to address and resolve the issues that prompted the AKSU ASUU to contemplate strike action.

    The labour delegation was headed by Comrade Sunny James, the chairperson of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) in the state, along with Dr. Inyang Udosen, the chairperson of the ASUU AKSU chapter, and other representatives.

    Read Also: Fed Govt seeks ASUU’s support for strike-free academic system

    Governor Eno agreed to address some contentious issues such as the payments of the 13th month salary bonus, the three-month palliative, and the construction of some strategic roads within the main campus at Ikot Akpaden, among other issues.

    The governor charged the Labour leaders to work closely with the government in delivering democratic dividends to the people of Akwa Ibom State.

    He described the university as the pride of the state and tasked the university’s management to utilize the internally generated revenue to execute some tasks, maintaining that, the government will always pay the monthly subvention as and when due.

    The visibly elated ASUU leaders praised the governor for his labour-friendly tendencies and assured that the planned strike would be called off.