Tag: ASUU

  • UNIJOS: lecturers seek solution to herdsmen/farmers clashes

    Worried by the frightening dimension of the herdsmen/farmers clashes across the country, lecturers of the University of Jos recently organised a symposium where they brainstormed on the menace that has claimed several lives and displaced millions.

    Among other concerns, the lecturers focused on why the violence had lingered for so long, the contending issues, hope for an early end to the gory sights, and whether the violence was beyond the security agencies.

    Other issues included the allegation that the military was colluding with the attackers, the deafening calls on Nigerians to defend themselves, and the fear that the nation could descend into anarchy and possible disintegration.

    To set the tone for the symposium that had the theme: “Ecology, class and categorical politics in contemporary Nigeria’’, Dr. Chris Piwuna, Chairman, Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), decried the incessant killings that had festered for more than 20 years, regretting that the situation was getting even worse.

    “After 20 years of killing, maiming and arson, it is time for us, as a nation, to reflect and sheath our sword. It is time to reason, time to dialogue, time to be brave and sit around the table and talk.

    “As a union, we do not accept the puerile and absurd argument that people that have lived together for hundreds of years can no longer live together.

    “It is time to be frank about the issues. Our rivers are red with blood; our fields are piled with bones of those slaughtered in their homes, and our children fear to go to school because they could be abducted. We cannot continue like this,’’ he said.

    Piwuna declared that the solution to the security challenges could only be found within the communities, urging stakeholders to work toward reaching a consensus while challenging government to provide platforms for consistent dialogue.

    He said that ASUU, as leaders of the intellectual community, must rise up to the challenge and seek a solution to the problem before it snowballed into a monster that could swallow everyone.

    On her part, Prof. Lami Lombin, Dean, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and former Director General, National Veterinary Research Institute (NVRI), Vom, who was the chairman of the occasion, said that the first step toward resolving the crisis was for the herdsmen to embrace a modern way of breeding cows, in view of the realities on ground.

    “Arable land is in short supply following rising demand and climatic changes that have destroyed a vast of the natural habitat.

    “Pastoralists must be dynamic; many things have changed. In 1950, we had a population of 33 million. Now, we have 182 million. It means the fight for limited resources has become fiercer.

    “The situation in the Lake Chad basin has worsened an already bad situation. It used to be 25,000 kilometres, but it has shrunk to 2,500 kilometres, displacing more than 10.5 million people.’’

    Lombin explained further: “Our population has grown astronomically, while land resources have shrunk drastically. What it means is that there are more farmers, industrialists and cow breeders competing for land resources that get smaller by the day.

    “The world has moved on; cows are being ranched in view of the dictates of realities. Herdsmen in Nigeria must move with the times in the interest of peace, the cows, and the general society. The simple truth is that the world can no longer accommodate open grazing which the Nigerian herdsman is insisting on,’’ she said

    She added that demographic changes and overgrazing had led to massive conflicts in the struggle for resources, noting that the conflict had been worsened by Nigeria’s porous borders and a poor data base that had made it impossible to determine the number of cattle to cater for.

    Lombin challenged cattle breeders to buy into current realities and adjust because their age-old lifestyle was no longer sustainable in today’s world.

    “The simple reality is that people are tired of violence and want to sleep at night,’’ she declared.

    Prof. Omotoye Olorode of Olabisi Onabanjo University, Agwo-Iwoye, Guest Speaker at the occasion, said that the search for a solution must begin with the search for the real owners of the cows grazing on Nigerian fields.

    “If we can get the owners of the cows, we shall track down those arming the `unknown gunmen’ to kill our rural dwellers.’’

    He accused the Nigerian ruling class of destroying the country by purchasing and amassing all the arable land to themselves, leaving the poor majority to fight over the little land resource left for them.

    “Nigerians must ask questions and insist on answers. Who are these gunmen? Who is arming them? Why has it been difficult to arrest and prosecute the attackers? How many herdsmen are in the country and what is the size of their herds?

    “Government must also be sincere in the search for peace and involve all stakeholders in the process. Over time, government has worked with a few elites that have neither cows nor farmlands. We must reach out to the ordinary peasant directly involved in farming and cattle breeding,’’ he said.

    Prof. Ochapa Onazi, former Vice Chancellor, University of Jos, who shared Olorode’s opinion, emphasised the need to involve the real herdsman and farmer in the search for peace between the duo.

    “The two groups have always lived together and are, therefore, in the best position to know what went wrong. They are in the best position to determine how and why things got so bad and should be central to any attempt to broker peace,’’ he said.

    Prof. Monday Mangvwat, another former Vice Chancellor of the university, while calling for a return to the traditional way of settling disputes between farmers and herdsmen, suggested that traditional rulers be central to the quest for a permanent solution to the crisis.

    He, however, advised Fulani herdsmen resident in Plateau communities to always report strange herdsmen in their midst, and also support efforts by their host toward ensuring that such strangers did not constitute a security risk.

    Mangvwat also appealed to the Fulani ethnic group to reject the perception that they had an unforgiving nature, saying that such impression was not good for them as a race.

    Prof. Hayward Mafuyai, immediate past Vice Chancellor of the university, accused the resident Fulani herdsmen of shielding the attackers.

    “It is difficult to accept the claims of the resident Fulani that the attackers are unknown to them because the attackers have always spared the residences of the Fulani people. We do not think that such is a coincidence. Our belief is that the attackers work in concert with the resident Fulani people.

    “If the resident Fulani herdsmen do not expose the marauders, that mutual trust that existed in the past will be eroded and the situation will continue to degenerate from bad to worse,’’ he said.

    Prof. Rotgag Gofwen of the Department of Sociology, in his contribution, blamed the violence on the “desperation to grab land by conquest’’.

    Noting that the attackers had always occupied villages hit, Gofwen said that such occupation signified that the areas had been conquered and their ancestral lands taken over by the conquerors.

    Gofwen accused the security agencies of “not doing enough’’, and alleged that security personnel deployed to protect the rural areas had often remained in the towns and highways, leaving the villages vulnerable to attacks.

    “The attackers are in the rural areas, but the Policemen and Special Task Force (STF) personnel remain on the roads checking vehicles.

    “In many cases, when attacks are reported to the security personnel, they hardly bother. They often claim to be waiting for instruction from `above’ which hardly ever comes, leaving the helpless victims at the mercy of the attackers,’’ he said.

    Malam Sani Suleiman, a herdsman, said that a lot of frustration was massing up for both the herdsmen and the farmers because each side was feeling robbed of justice.

    “The farmer feels frustrated while the herdsman feel cheated. Any attempt to broker peace must involve the real farmers and herdsmen because they feel the heat of this crisis,’’ he said.

    He said that Fulani herdsmen were against ranching, colonies, and grazing reserves because no one had actually taken time to educate them on the benefits of such policies and what they entailed.

    Suleiman also accused the nation’s policy makers of paying lip service to the lingering clashes, saying that bills for the establishment of a commission for nomads and the resuscitation of grazing reserves and routes had been “abandoned’’ by the National Assembly.

    He urged leaders to encourage herdsmen and farmers to work together to fight cattle rustling, banditry and armed robbery, and accused the ruling elites of promoting divisive tendencies that had pitted the herdsman against the farmer with whom he had enjoyed a symbiotic relationship over time.

    For Prof. Stephen Banfa, the solution to the crisis rests on a return to the history of how people and nations rose from one stage to another.

    “Nations have moved and so must Nigeria and its herdsmen. The herdsmen cannot remain static in a pastoralist and medieval economy in an era of capitalist economy. They cannot be moving from place to place. They must embrace ranching as the best way to breed cattle,’’ he said.

    He also accused government of hypocrisy, wondering how attackers could still be “unknown’’ after they had occupied the residences of their victims and converted their food, livestock and ancestral land into their own.

    “My feeling is that those occupying the fled villages are already settling in `conquered’ territories which makes nonsense of the claims that the attackers are unknown gunmen,’’ he said.

    Positing that justice was a precondition for peace, he tasked government to chase out invaders that had occupied “conquered’’ territories in Plateau, Kaduna, Benue, Taraba and other states, and ensure the return of the sacked villagers to their ancestral land to ease tension and restore peace.

    But Prof. Zanzan Uyi of the Faculty of Architecture, however, had a totally different view.

    “We are told that it is a problem caused by desert encroachment. Israel, Libya, and other Arab nations are 90 per cent desert lands, but export food and fruits. Can’t Nigeria do same and claim lands encroached upon by the desert?

    “Again, only recently, Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano invited all herdsmen to relocate to Kano. He said that Kano had enough land and water for them. Colorado in the U. S. is less than Kano in size, but hosts more cows than those in Nigeria. Let the herdsmen heed that call and move into Kano where there is a ready environment for their cattle.’’

    Some discussants, however, opined that the problem had remained intractable because it had not been properly diagnosed.

    One such discussant, Malam Adamu Aje, decried the conflicting interpretation of the crisis by major stakeholders, and declared that such confusion had “turned a simple disagreement into a huge crisis”.

    “The Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, says the violence is a communal clash; Kaduna governor Nasir el-Rufai traces its roots to earlier attacks on foreign herdsmen after the 2011 election, while others have blamed the attacks on insurgents from Libya.

    “Not long ago, government officials blamed the attacks on new laws banning open grazing in some states. Others trace the crisis to encroachment on traditional grazing routes. What it means is that we are yet to get to the root of the problem. Unless we get to that root, we shall not come out of this hole,’’ he said.

    Other discussants opined that the violence was just part of a larger expansionist agenda, and advised anyone championing such agenda to discard it “so as not to plunge the country into anarchy and chaos”.

    One such discussant, Prof. Charles Gonyok, said that the crisis was assuming frightening dimension with anarchy gradually setting in.

    “Those concerned must move fast to end the killing because the affected communities might react when pushed to the wall. When that happens, the result will be unpredictable,’’ he said.

    Gonyok said that the attacks in Plateau were more frightening because the area worst affected is Daffo that was renowned for producing Irish potatoes, maize, rice and millet.

    “If the situation continues, hunger is imminent because farmers have been chased off the farms and are afraid to return.

    “In major farming areas like Hotom, Werem, Maiduna, Ganda, Ngakudu, Joshol and Hurti, the farmers have fled.

    “The rains are here, but instead of the potatoes, we have weeds on the fields. Government must take drastic steps to end the violence in the interest of the nation,’’ he said.

    Overwhelmed by the torrents of contributions, the lecturers resolved to form cluster groups that would dissect the contending issues and come up with a position paper to be submitted to government.

    Analysts, while commending the lecturers for the effort, have urged them to organise more platforms for such frank discussions that would serve as breeding grounds for ideas.

    They say that such platforms will give perceived “enemies’’ the opportunity to voice out their anger, frustrations, grievances and concerns, which will facilitate the search for common grounds.

    Piwuna is on the same page with the analysts.

    “The discussions will be sustained; we must, collectively, seek out ideas and explore them. Ultimately, a cross fertilisation of these ideas will form the basis upon which the contending issues will be resolved toward building a consensus that will facilitate the return of peace to the troubled rural communities.”

    NAN

  • Sex scandal: OAU ASUU chapter hails prof.’s suspension

    The Academic Staff Union ( ASUU ), Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, says it is satisfied with the suspension Prof. Richard Akindele, who was allegedly involved in a sex-for-mark scandal.

    Dr Adeola Egbedodun, the Chairperson of the union, in a statement in Osogbo on Friday, commended the university management for the prompt action taken on the recommendations of the investigative panel.

    The Vice Chancellor of the institution, Prof. Eyitope Ogunbodede,  on Thursday confirmed the suspension of the professor.

    Ogunbodede, in a statement, said he had received and considered the interim report of the committee set up to investigate the allegation, as revealed in the audio recording.

    He also said that the female voice in the audio which went viral had been identified as that of Miss Monica Osetobe Osagie, a postgraduate student on the Master of Business Administration programme.

    Read Also: OAU sex for marks: I was never invited by the committee – Monica Osagie

    Egbedokun, however, urged the Vice Chancellor and his team not to relent in their efforts to get to the root of the matter and ensure that justice was done.

    “The Obafemi Awolowo University Branch ASUU commends the administration for the step taken towards ensuring sanity in the system.

    “The union expresses satisfaction on the prompt action taken by the administration.

    “ASUU OAU reiterates its commitment to defending the integrity of the code of conduct of the university and to upholding its ethical standards.’’

    Egbedokun, however, urged members of the union to always adhere strictly to the code of conduct guiding their appointment in the university as they carry out their lawful activities.

  • ASUU decries N66m capital projects allocation to UI

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yesterday decried’the paltry’ N66 million allocation for capital projects in the University of Ibadan (UI), with a student population of about 30,000.

    It said senators, who appropriated the amount, were paid N13.5 million each as running cost per month.

    The union said this could only happen where the ruling class lacked vision.

    UI ASUU Chairman Dr. Deji Omole, who addressed reporters yesterday, said the failure to vote enough money for public university was causing crisis with students.

    He said: “It will be difficult to have a citizen who will love the country in future if the present trend of abandoning the poor, while taking care of the rich, is not stopped.

    “While each senator is paid N13.5 million as running cost per month, the same Senate appropriated a paltry N66 million for capital projects in the University of Ibadan, with a student population of about 30,000. This can only happen in a country the ruling class lacks vision. This government refuses to drop a kobo for the revitalisation of public universities. Children of the poor are denied access because universities cannot admit beyond what the dilapidated infrastructure can take. Yet, their parents cannot afford private universities. The Federal Government is owing public universities about N800 billion revitalisation funds as contained in the agreement with ASUU.”

    Omole, who said the union will oppose unnecessary dues on poor students, added that the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led Federal Government had performed poorly in education.

    He said in the United States of America, the elite funded public universities because the country was interested in bridging the gap between the rich and the poor.

    “They know the implication of having a growing number of illiterates as we have in Nigeria today.”

    The chairman said the Federal Government had paid lip-service to public education, preferring to pacify militants and terrorists.

    He noted that while the people are suffering, the political class has enough to spend in preparation for 2019 general election.

  • We shall not dignify ASUU with response, says LASU management

    The management of Lagos State University (LASU) has said it will not join issues with the university chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) over a matter that is already in court.

    It denied a rumour that it was trying to frustrate a case brought against it to favour Dr. Tajudeen Abanikanda, a lecturer in the Department of Fishery.

    The lecturer was demoted from professor to senior lecturer by the university governing council, on the grounds that his (Abanikanda’s) appointment did not follow due process.

    The Vice Chancellor of LASU, Prof. Lanre Adigun Faghohun, addressed reporters yesterday during a stakeholders’ meeting held on the university premises.

    The leadership of ASUU had sued the university over the dismissal of its Chairman and Deputy, Dr. Isaac Akinloye Oyewunmi and Dr. Adebowale Adeyemi-Suenu in November last year.

    The management also sacked 15 other academic and two non-academic staff on various academic infractions.

    Oyewunmi was sacked for collecting N50,000 from 2003 modular year students of Political Science (Education) on the sandwich programme.  Adeyemi-Suenu was said to have altered results of 12 students already advised to withdraw by the Senate in the Department of History and International Studies in the 2015/2016 academic session. This led to his dismissal.

    The union described the management action as victimisation.

    Fagbohun, however, accused the leadership of the union of engaging in a campaign of calumny, saying dignifying them with a response would amount to contempt of court.

  • ASUU: Fed Govt neglecting varsity education

    THE Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has accused the Federal Government of destroying tertiary education.

    The association’s University of Ibadan Chapter Chairman, Dr Deji Omole stated this in Ibadan.

    In a statement, ASUU said in terms of funding,   both the Peoples Demoratic party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) have failed in its varsity programmes.

    It accused the ruling APC  of not injecting cash into revitalisation fund set up to boost public varsity education to assist children of the downtrodden.

    According to Omole, only former president Goodluck Jonathan injected N200billion into the fund  after an industrial action of almost six months in 2013.

    The union said the Federal Government promised to  inject N1.13trilion into public universities over six years, but that the government only paid N200million into the fund 2013. Since then, he said, nothing had been done.

    He blamed the President Muhammadu Buhari administration for not  revitalising public universities even after the union went on strike on the matter last year.

    Omole noted that infrastructure in public varsities are worse than what they were when the Federal Government conducted the NEEDS assessment on public varsities in 2012.

    “Public universities are grossly underfunded leading to serious pressure on the available resources, which have been stressed beyond elastic limits. Many qualified candidates cannot be absolved into the system due to lack of adequate facilities. Children of the masses are housed in zoo-like condition. Laboratory, lecture rooms, light are worse-off now.”

    ASUU said it was unfair for the government to commit huge sums to fighting insurgency, kidnapping, cybercrimes, armed robbery, rape, among others, while neglecting a vital sector, such as education.

    “Despite agreeing with ASUU to pump in N1.3trilion spread out in six years (2013 (N200billion); 2014 (N220billion); 2015 (N220b); 2016 (N220billion); 2017 (N220billion), 2018 (N220billion); only the Jonathan administration released N200billion in 2013 and that was all Not even a kobo for revitalisation has come from the Muhammadu Buhari government since 2015,’’ he claimed.

  • ASUU slams govt for ‘refusal’ to rescue tertiary education

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has decried an alleged plan by the Federal Government to destroy tertiary education.

    ASUU accused the Federal Government of allegedly refusing to inject revitalisation fund into tertiary education, as agreed in 2013.

    The action, ASUU alleged, could destroy tertiary education the way public primary and secondary education was destroyed.

    It alleged that in terms of education funding, all parties, whether Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) or All Progressives Congress (APC) have failed Nigerians.

    The union claimed that the plan became obvious with the refusal of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration to inject revitalisation fund into public university education, to assist children of the poor enjoy qualitative education and challenge misrule in future.

    The Chairman, ASUU in University of Ibadan, Dr. Deji Omole, in a statement yesterday in Ibadan, said ex-President Goodluck Jonathan injected N200 billion for the revitalisation of public universities after an industrial action of almost six months in 2013.

    “The union and the Federal Government agreed that N1.13 trilion would be injected into public universities for six years, but the Federal Government only paid N200 million in 2013,” he said.

    Omole slammed the Buhari government for not changing anything in the area of revitalisation of public universities, even after ASUU went on strike last year.

    He alleged that infrastructure in public universities were worse today than when the Federal Government conducted the NEEDS assessment on public universities in 2012.

    “Public universities are underfunded, leading to pressure on the resources, which have been stressed beyond elastic limit. Many qualified candidates cannot be absolved into the system due to lack of facilities. Children of the masses are housed in zoo-like condition. Laboratory, lecture rooms and electricity are worse-off now,” ASUU said.

    Rather than investing in youths, the union said the government was committing more money to fighting insurgency, kidnapping, cybercrimes, robbery, rape, among others.

    ”Despite agreeing with ASUU to pump in N1.3 trillion spread out in six years – 2013 (N200 billion); 2014 (N220 billion); 2015 (N220 billion); 2016 (N220 billion); 2017 (N220 billion) and 2018 (N220 billion); only the Jonathan administration released N200 billion in 2013 and that was all! Not even a kobo for revitalisation has come from the Buhari government since 2015,” the union said.

  • Can  splinter group threaten ASUU?

    Can splinter group threaten ASUU?

    For the  Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), these are not the best of times. It is facing a tough challenge from a splinter group trying to woo disaffected members, report Kofoworola Belo-Osagie, Adeniyi Adesoji (Osogbo), Adekunle Jimoh (Ilorin), and Aiwerie Okungbowa (Asaba)

    LEaders of the Congress of University Academics (CONUA),  which broke away from the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), were inaugurated on Tuesday at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    CONUA came into being because of an unresolved crisis in the university’s chapter of ASUU since 2013. It is made up of aggrieved members of ASUU who pulled out last week because their grievances were allegedly not addressed by the national ASUU leadership.

    A five-member electoral committee, headed by Prof D. O. Ogungbile, conducted the election of the new officers of the new union penultimate Wednesday.

    The nine members that constitute the executive of CONUA are: Niyi Sunmonu, chairman; Fayomi Awodele (vice chairman); Henry Oripeloye (secretary); and H. A. Adefeso (assistant secretary).

    Others are M. O. Awoyemi (treasurer); O. Arawomo (financial secretary); A. A. Shobola (welfare officer); B. O. Odu (internal auditor); and O. F. Adebowale (investment officer).

    The Nation gathered that some of its members accused the national leadership of ASUU of being incompetent, saying that it was unable to resolve the crisis bedeviling the local chapter.

    The problem of the university ASUU began in 2013 during the selection of a new vice chancellor after Prof. Bamitale Omole’s tenure expired.

    The OAU ASUU leaders were divided over how the vice chancellorship race was being handled, a matter which polarised the members on who became the head of the institution.

    Also, the election of the new executive council of the union in 2016 was another big contention. Petitions against some aspirants, including candidates for the chairman and treasurer positions, were written to the national ASUU leadership.

    Sunmonu said many members felt the 2016 election crisis, which produced Caleb Aborisade as chairman, was not well managed by the national ASUU.

    By last year, the division seemed to have taken root as two factions existed – one that had the sympathy of the school management, and the other recognised by the national body.

    When ASUU called a national strike last August, the disagreement in the union resulted in a faction not joining the strike and the other complying.

    Sunmonu, who led one of the factions, said then that the lecturers did not join the strike because they got no directive from the national ASUU.

    However, Aborisade said his members would comply.

    Justifying the formation of CONUA, Sunmonu told our correspondent on phone, after his inauguration, that his members could not get justice from the national exco of ASUU, faulting them for expelling a member of the caretaker committee who, they said, addressed the election errors that produced Aborisade.

    He said: “The report of the E. O. Osodeke panel set up by the national ASUU after a series of petitions on the issue of election that produced Aborisade was not allowed to see the light of the day. The peak was the suspension of a member of the caretaker committee. It was a great injustice that our members could not take any longer.”

    When reached for comments, Aborisade refused to speak with The Nation, saying he was being misrepresented.

    However, the Public Relations Officer of OAU, Mr. Biodun Olarewaju, said the formation of the new union would not in any way affect the operations of the university.

    “Lecturers are not employed as members of any union. As the university relates to unions so also it relates to individuals,” he said.

    CONUA is seeking to spread its tentacles beyond OAU and has started reaching out to universities where there is crisis.  Sunmonu said the union would rival ASUU with the hope of ending what he described as its (ASUU’s) dictatorial tendencies.

    He said: “With the establishment of CONUA as a rival to ASUU, some Nigerian university lecturers that are not in good terms with the national body of ASUU are also planning to join the new group. The University of Ilorin has shown interest in joining the newly formed group, Kwara State University, Delta State University and University of Nigeria, Nsukka will be joining to jointly kick against the dictatorial tendency of ASUU.”

    At the UNILORIN, the ASUU that is loyal to the institution’s management hailed the  OAU branch for breaking away from the parent body of the union.

    It said the chapter’s decision to sever relationship with ASUU national body was a vindication of UNILORIN’s ASUU on the high-handedness of the parent body.

    UNILORIN-ASUU has been at loggerheads with the leadership of the national union since a former vice chancellor of the university, Prof Abdulrahman Oba, sacked 49 lecturers for complying with a national ASUU strike.  The sack was later overturned by a court in 2009.  However, since then, UNILORIN-ASUU has not participated in national strikes. Last year, the chairman and secretary of the faction of the union loyal to the national ASUU leadership were sacked.

    Speaking with our correspondent on the phone, ASUU chairman, which has the sympathy of the school management, Dr Raheem Usman, praised OAU lecturers for starting CONUA.

    “For Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) to break away from the national body of ASUU, it has vindicated UNILORIN-ASUU.

    “It shows that the national body of the union is high-handed. What UNILORIN ASUU endured for about two decades, OAU ASUU cannot endure for one year.”

    However, he said the UNILORIN-ASUU congress had to decide if it would join CONUA.

    “As for joining the break-away OAU ASUU, we are yet to take a decision. It will be decided by the congress of our union,” he said.

    When contacted on management’s stand, UNILORIN spokesman Kunle Akogun said: “Let us get to the bridge before crossing it. When they take their own decision, the management will also take its own.”

    At the Kwara State University (KWASU), Malete, a faction of ASUU, led by Dr Adesola Dauda, said those breaking away had been expelled by the National Executive Council (NEC) – the highest decision-making organ of the union last month.

    “Those that said they broke away from ASUU national body are the people that had been expelled by the national body at the Gombe State University NEC meeting last month. Some were suspended, some expelled based on anti-union activities,” he said.

    He added that the union would remain faithful to ASUU.

    “We are still with the ASUU national, but the management ASUU on campus can claim that they are not with the ASUU national, but KWASU ASUU is with the ASUU national,” he said.

    When contacted, the factional chair of KWASU ASUU loyal to the management, Dr Issa Abdulraheem, said they were on their way to Ile-Ife.  He promised to call back, but had not by press time.

    Although a legal battle has stalled ASUU branch activities at the Delta State University (DELSU), Abraka, the state-owned higher institution says it will not join CONUA.

    The ASUU branch in the institution is still firmly in ASUU, the immediate past chairman, Dr. Emmanuel Mordi, said. In an interview with The Nation, he described the new body CONUA as a fad.

    According to him, CONUA will go the way of other break-away factions set up in the past to challenge ASUU, adding that many universities like the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) that left the union have since returned.

    He said: “In those days we had a parallel ASUU; we even had a body made up of professors. But soon these bodies faded away. We never left ASUU. The University of Ilorin is a pariah school. DELSU has always been a vibrant branch.

    “Its Chairman, Prof Abel Diakparomore’s election was nullified as he was not eligible to contest, and he went to NEC in Bauchi. He was given an opportunity to defend himself and it became clear to him that he was ineligible to contest. But he went to court and, by so doing, an individual has locked up the branch.

    He was elected for a two-year-tenure, which expired since 2014; so, what is he still doing there?

    “DELSU is in ASUU.  I do not see how anybody can remove DELSU from ASUU. ABU left, UNILAG came begging to be readmitted into ASUU. Often, some vice-chancellors want to weaken the union. Then you see such problems. But some vice-chancellors who take over from such VCs do not interfere in union activities. At the end, the CONUA will fizzle out, OAU will go back to ASUU.  From my records, OAU has not left the NEC of ASUU.”

    Reacting to the formation of CONUA, ASUU National President Prof Biodun Ogunyemi said the union would respond appropriately after its NEC.

    “I have no comment for now.  At the appropriate time, the union will speak on the matter,” he said.

    He added that any decision about managing crisis in local chapters was always guided by the union’s constitution.

    “There will be disagreements in many unions.  It is not unexpected.  Crisis in our branches are being resolved according to the provision of our constitution.  Our constitution guides what we do in the union,” he told The Nation.

     

  • ASUU crisis in OAU to be resolved soon

    ASUU crisis in OAU to be resolved soon

    The President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities ( ASUU ) Dr Biodun Ogunyemi has assured that the current crisis rocking Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) chapter of the union would soon be resolved.

    According to him, the crisis is just a little problem over the decision of the union at the National level to ‘punish’ officials of the union for their various roles during the Vice Chancellorship crisis that rocked the University in 2016.

    “Basically what caused this issue was the disciplinary measure meted out to officials of the University.  We would get over the storm soon but there is nothing like ASUU OAU pulling out. Only some persons are frowning at the disciplinary measures,” Ogunyemi ascertained.

    Read Also: ‘ ASUU won’t join NASU strike’

     The appointment of Professor Ayobami Salami as the Vice Chancellor of the institution by the Governing Council triggered protests by the Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities and other non-Academic Unions in the University which led to a disagreement between lecturers.

    Following the disagrement, some lecturers who are reportedly said to belong to the  Niyi Sunmonu led faction of the union in the University had said they would pull out of ASUU and stop paying their dues.

  • OAU’s ASUU pulls out of national body

    OAU’s ASUU pulls out of national body

    •Varsity forms new union

    The local branch of the Academic Staff Union of Universities of Obafemi Awolowo University (ASUU-OAU) has pulled out of the national body.

    It also formed a new association, following prolonged faceoff between the national and local chapter of the union.

    The OAU chapter’s decision to pull out of the national body was taken at a congress on February 12, which rejected the resolut

    ions of ASUU’s National Executive Council (ASUU-NEC) meeting on the face-off between it and the parent body.

    It was learnt that the congress decided “to constitute itself into a branch that is totally independent of NEC, adopt appropriate name and open a new branch account for the check-off dues of its members in this regards”.

    This is contained in the local branch’s resolution signed by the chairman of its caretaker committee, Dr Niyi Sunmonu.

    Last years, 732 of the 1,371 OAU academic workers wrote the university management to stop payment of their check-off dues to the national body in protest against the way the latter handled the branch’s crisis.

    Other reasons given by OAU’s branch to form a new union include the alleged unilateral removal of the elected treasurer by ASUU national president and the alleged transfer of N11 million from OAU branch account to ASUU national account.

    The congress noted that the removal of the duly elected treasurer and transfer of the money prompted majority of the members to request that the deduction of their check-off dues to ASUU national body be stopped.

    Also, the decision of ASUU’s NEC to accept the suspended and contentious result of the vice chancellor selection and the rejection of the caretaker committee to run the affairs of the union, after the presiding officers had abandoned the congress midway on Thursday, October 20, 2016, which he conveyed, was another reason they pulled out.

    ASUU’s OAU has been at loggerhead with the national body over the constitution of a caretaker committee, following the sack of the Dr. Caleb Aborisade-led executives by the congress.

    This was the fallout of the cancelled vice chancellor selection by the Federal Government.

    ASUU’s national body rejected the sack of Aborisade-led exco but the local branch insisted on Dr. Niyi Summonu-led caretaker committee and stopped the remittance of check-off dues to the national body.

    Reacting to ASUU’s NEC meeting of February 3 and 4, which expelled three OAU branch caretaker committee members and the suspension of 13 others, the council rejected the sanctions and passed a vote of confidence on Dr. Summonu-led caretaker committee.

    According to the congress resolutions, it reaffirmed its total, unalloyed and unflinching confidence in the caretaker committee and those sanctioned.

    The aggrieved OAU academic workers also resolved to constitute an electoral committee to conduct the election of its executives within two weeks and appoint a five-member electoral committee.

    Another major decision was the composition of a constitution-drafting committee for the branch for which three members were appointed.

    The branch also decided to write the vice chancellor to stop the deduction of check-off dues for lecturers at OAU due to the information that the bursar failed to implement the written requests by some members that the deduction of their check-off dues be stopped.

    It was also gathered that ASUU-NEC suspended Aborisade for six months for allegedly misrepresenting NEC, while the Akure zonal coordinator, Dr. Alex Odiyi, was issued a warning letter.

     

  • ASUU urges Kogi governor to recall sacked lecturers

    ASUU urges Kogi governor to recall sacked lecturers

    Wants Ambode to resolve LASU crisis

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has urged the Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello, to recall its 150 members sacked at the state university.

    The union also implored the Lagos State Governor,  Akinwunmi Ambode,  to address the current crisis at the Lagos State University (LASU) before it escalates further.

    Addressing journalists in Awka, the zonal coordinator of, ASUU,  Owerri zone, Prof. Ike Odimegwu, said the union would no longer condone such embarrassing situations.

    He said the Kogi governor should tread the path of honour and reverse his “unwarranted provocations.”

    Odimegwu said: “As a union, we have demanded and still demand the immediate recall of the unjustly dismissed lecturers at kogi State University and the payments of all their entitlements.

    He said the crisis in kogi State University had been a recurring incident due to inadequate funding and erosion of University autonomy and academic standards by the state government.

    On LASU, the union urged Ambode to use his good office to arrest the ugly trend in the institution by directing the Governing Council and the university administrators to ensure amicable resolution of the crisis before it is too late.