Tag: Niger Delta University

  • Non-academic staff begin indefinite strike in Bayelsa varsity 

    Non-academic staff begin indefinite strike in Bayelsa varsity 

    Non-teaching staff of the Bayelsa State-owned Niger Delta University, Wilberforce Island, have embarked on an indefinite strike.
    The employees, under the auspices of the Joint Action Committee of NAAT, NASU and SSANU, NDU said in Yenagoa on Wednesday that their action was to protest non-payment of salaries for seven months.
    The workers further said that the government had been unable to address issues affecting them. 
    According to them instead of addressing their problems the government went ahead to issue a statement withdrawing from payment of NDU staff salaries.
    The workers’ position was contained in a communique signed by the Chairman, National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), Dienagha Ekeipre; Chairman, Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), Fakidoma Wilcox; and Chairman, Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU), Kenneth Akpoafagha.
    The communique said:  ”We hereby recall our ‘sit-at-home industrial action’ which was suspended on August 29, 2016.
    ”We are against the government’s plan to downsize/retrench staff of the university. The present staff strength of the university is grossly inadequate in line with the National Universities Commission’s guidelines.
    ”We also embark on the industrial action because of the government’s decision to arbitrarily increase students’ school fees.
    ”Based on the unfruitful discussion with the state government and the reasons given above, the unions under the umbrella of the Joint Action Committee, NDU chapter, resume the suspended industrial action with effect from this week.”
    Efforts to get the reaction of the Commissioner for Education, Mr Markson Fefegha, were unsuccessful as calls to his mobile phone indicated that it was switched off.
  • ASUU shuts Bayelsa varsity over unpaid salary arrears

    ASUU shuts Bayelsa varsity over unpaid salary arrears

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in the Bayelsa State-owned Niger Delta University (NDU) has commenced a sit-at-home protest following the inability of the Governor Seriake Dickson-led administration to pay lecturers of the university five-month salary arrears.

    Investigations revealed that ASUU at the weekend directed its members to vacate the campus and to suspend all academic activities till further notice.

    When our correspondent visited the school on Friday, no lecturer reported to work and classrooms were found empty.

    Ongoing examinations were suspended and students were seen leaving the campus and the university community for their various homes.

    The ASUU Chairman in NDU, Stanley Ogoun, confirmed the development and said lecturers could no longer be discharging their duties without money to run their daily expenses.

    He said: “We have started the sit-at-home action and this means suspension of all academic activities relating to teaching and examination of students”.

    But the Bayelsa State Government appealed to ASUU and other workers in the state not to despair over the economic crisis facing the state insisting that clearing their backlog of salaries remained the first-line charge of Dickson.

    The government in a statement co-signed by the two political advisers to the governor, Mr. Fyneman Wilson and Mr. Steven Diver, said the governor and his team were going through sleepless nights to pay the workers.

    The statement said the governor had already set up a Financial Management Committee chaired by the deputy Governor, Mr. John Jonah, to review monthly financial obligations and satisfy the basic ones.

    “To this effect, paying workers’ salaries always come first before other financial obligations. Steps are already being taken to ensure the payment of salaries within the shortest possible time.

    “We are appealing to workers to exercise some patience because they will soon receive their pay. We also appreciate Bayelsans for displaying sense of maturity and understanding despite the difficult time they are going through,” the statement said.

    The statement also highlighted the economic difficulties faced by the state adding that it was painful for a state which used to collect an average of N16bn monthly to settle for N2.9bn in January and N1.6bn in March.

    According to the statement allocations of three months were not enough to pay over N4bn monthly salaries of the workers.

    It said the verification committee set up by the government to clean the payrolls of public servants would ensure that genuine, honest and hard-working workers received their entitlements.

    The statement said: “The Dickson’s administration is the one that values all workers in the state and committed to improving the welfare of workers including paying gratuities and pensions of retired workers.

    “The governor has also taken steps to strengthen the Internally-Generated Revenue (IGR). He should be commended for looking inwards”.

    It also clarified that the government received N1.285bn bailout fund for the eight local government areas instead of N12.85bn wrongly reported in the media.

    “The Dickson-led administration in Bayelsa is focused. When this economic crisis started in the country, Bayelsa managed to stay afloat because of the governor’s prudence in the management of scarce resources.

    “Following the submission of verification reports from the local government areas, the government will soon direct the various councils to start paying salaries of their workers,” the statement said.

  • Niger Delta varsity shut down over students’ protest

    The Vice-Chancellor, Niger Delta University, Amassoma, Bayelsa State, Prof. Humphrey Ogoni, Tuesday, shut down the institution following violent protest by students.

    The students barricaded the university to protest an academic regulation that stopped many final year students in the Faculty of Engineering from graduating.

    The regulation said to be in line with the minimum standard set by the National University Commission (NUC) required students in the faculty to pass the compulsory courses of Mathematics, Chemistry and Physics.

    The students were said to have embarked on the protest in solidarity with 20 of their colleagues affected by the regulation. Patrol vans of the police were drafted to the school to stop the students from destroying the school assets.

    It was gathered that some miscreants hijacked the protest and forced the university authority to shut down the campus to forestall law and order.

    Ogoni who spoke to our correspondent said he asked the students to embark on mid-semester break when he discovered that some hoodlums hijacked the protest.

    He also asked persons in hostels to vacate the campus till further notice. But he said the school authority issued a directive to review the regulation to ensure uniform implementation.

    Ogoni further added that the the university reached an agreement with the affected students to resolve the matter and enable them graduate.

    He said: “The management has reached an understanding with the affected students to enable them to graduate. The current protest was hijacked by other students who had been advised to withdraw because of their failure to measure up.

    “The university authority will review the new regulation and the students will now be informed of the resumption date at the appropriate time.”

     

  • Anger as Dickson’s sister suffers in kidnappers’ den 45 days after

    Anger as Dickson’s sister suffers in kidnappers’ den 45 days after

    There was anger in Bayelsa State, Saturday, as Nancy Keme Dickson, the abducted younger sister to the Governor of Bayelsa State, Mr. Seriake Dickson, remained in kidnappers’ den for about 45 days.

    Most residents who spoke to our correspondent said it was unbelievable that a governor’s sister could spend such number of days in captivity.

    While some of them said it was inexcusable for the governor to allow his sister to languish in the company of notorious criminals, others urged the abductors to set the lady free on compassionate grounds.

    Nancy, 26, said to be the last child of the Dickson’s family, was abducted on December 19, 2015 by unidentified gunmen.

    The student of the state-owned Niger Delta University (NDU), was kidnapped at her shop located in Okaka Road, Yenagoa, the state capital.

    The gunmen who reportedly drove in an ash Lexus Jeep, trailed her to her shop and whisked her away to an unknown place at about 2:50pm.

    Her shop is located in a building housing the office of the Bayelsa Volunteers, an army of youths working for the state government to assist security agencies in bursting crime.

    Nancy was abducted after the December 5, 2015 governorship election and a few weeks to the January 9 supplementary poll, which Dickson won and became reelected for a second term.

    Her travails appeared to have been forgotten until The Nation recently published a report reawakening public consciousness on the matter.

    A top security source who spoke in confidence said security agencies in the state totally forgot the matter until they read the report.

    He said the governor mentioned it during the state Security Council Meeting that was held on Monday.

    “The report reawakened the consciousness of security commanders on the matter. At the last security council meeting, the governor mentioned the case of his sister.

    “But he said he would not pay ransom to the kidnappers. He, however, did not give the security commander a marching order to secure the freedom of his sister,” he said.

    It was, however, learnt that a first attempt through a negotiating team to set Nancy free was tragic as the kidnappers reportedly collected money from a member of the team, set his car ablaze and threatened to kill him.

    The kidnappers were said to have held the negotiator hostage for about a week before releasing him.

    A resident of Yenagoa who identified himself simply as Peter urged the governor to handle his sister’s case as an emergency.

    “We know that the governor has always spoken against paying ransom, but when a matter gets to this level, the governor can play along, retrieve his sister first and then go after the kidnappers as the Chief Security Officer of the state.

    “The health of Nancy should be paramount now because she must have been subjected to inhuman treatments because she is a young and attractive lady,” he said.

    An aide to the governor on Social Media, Mr. John Idumange, appealed to the kidnappers to release Nancy unconditionally.

    Idumange said: “Miss Nancy Dickson was kidnapped about seven weeks ago. We have made inexorable efforts to appeal to her kidnappers to release the girl unconditionally. As a student, this has already destroyed her academic career.

    “Once more, we wish to express our deep concern about this kidnap saga. This is one kidnap too many. We do not know those who have done this evil deed, but God is watching. We passionately appeal to the kidnappers to release her unconditionally.

    “She must have been traumatized to the point of overkill and enough of this inhumanity to her persons.”

    When contacted, the Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Butswat Asinim, said the police were doing their best to free the lady.

  • Odi: Compensation panel members pull out over threat to lives

    Odi: Compensation panel members pull out over threat to lives

    •‘Govt’s N15b of N37.6b compensation final, not part’

    The Chairman of the Odi Community Compensation Trust Fund Management Committee, Prof. Kobina Imananagha, has alerted to alleged threats on the lives of members of the committee.

    It was learnt that they had pulled out, to avoid being killed by allegedly sponsored youths of the ancient community.

    Imananagha is a former Provost of the College of Medical Sciences of the Bayelsa State owned Niger Delta University (NDU) on Wilberforce Island.

    The panel chairman said N15 billion of the N37.6 billion released by the Federal Government to Odi as compensation was the final payment and not part payment, as being insinuated in some quarters.

    Imananagha spoke yesterday in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, at an interactive session with reporters.

    The leader of the Odi Destruction Case Prosecution Committee explained that he and two other Odi retirees sponsored the prosecution of the Odi case in Nigerian and London courts.

    He said many Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) were hired to prosecute the matter for 10 years without any contribution from other residents of the community.

    Imananagha agree to pay eminent lawyers 40 per cent of the compensation, if they won, and 60 per cent to the community.

    The academic said it was difficult to get lawyers to agree on the percentage, as some from Lagos wanted 60 or 50 per cent of the compensation.

    Imananagha, a former chief medical director (CMD) of the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, noted that with the release of N15 billion by the Federal Government, the lawyers took N6 billion while N9 billion was left to Odi for the development of the community and to rebuild homes destroyed by soldiers during the November 20, 1999 invasion.

    He recalled that Olusegun Obasanjo was the President then and Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha Bayelsa State governor.