Tag: Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU)

  • UNILAG postpones 2017 convocation

    UNILAG postpones 2017 convocation

    The University of Lagos ( UNILAG ), on Tuesday said it had postponed its convocation ceremony for the 2016/2017 academic session.

    The Vice-Chancellor of the institution, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe who disclosed this in an interview with our reporter in Lagos said that a suitable date for the ceremony would be announced in due course.

    The university, in a statement earlier issued , had stated that a news conference to announce activities lined up  for the event had been slated for Feb. 14.

    “Yes, after some deliberations with management, the university has decided to postpone the convocation ceremony.

    “This is as a result of the challenges posed by the on-going strike embarked upon by members of the non –academic labour unions of universities.

    “The ceremony was earlier scheduled to hold from Monday, Feb. 19 to Thursday Feb. 22 .

    “The activities of these unions have the potential of snowballing and marring the carefully laid out arrangements already put in place for the ceremony,’’ he said.

    Ogundipe stated that though arrangements for a successful ceremony were already at an advanced stage, the institution would not give room for anything that might cause any form of inconvenience or embarrassments to invited guests.

    “The university remains committed to providing a conducive atmosphere that would foster quality teaching and research as well as produce graduates that can compete with their counterparts globally.

    “Hence, members of the community are enjoined to continue their lawful activities,’’ the vice-chancellor said.

    Members of the unions, the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities ( SSANU ), the Non Academic Staff Union ( NASU ) and the National Association of Academic Technologists ( NAATS ), had embarked on strike on Dec. 4, 2017.

    The unions, under the aegis of the Joint Actions Committee (JAC), were protesting among other issues, the non-implementation of agreement they entered into with the Federal government in 2009.

    They were also protesting the sharing formula of the N23 billion released by the Federal government as part of earned allowance of workers of federal universities across the country.

    The National President of the JAC, Mr Samson Ugwoke, had while declaring the strike in December said it would be ‘comprehensive, total and indefinite’.

    NAN

  • SSANU to FG: Take over LAUTECH now

    SSANU to FG: Take over LAUTECH now

    The Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) has asked the Federal Government to save the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology by immediately taking over ownership of the institution from the present owners in the interest of the staff and students of the institution.

    The union also called on the Government to make public all the recovered money from politicians and public office holders and inject the money into the economy to help get the country of recession.

    In a communique at the end of its National Executive Council meeting, the union expressed dismay that both Oyo and Osun state governments who are joint owners of the institution have abandoned jeopardizing the careers of its members, lives of students and other members of the University community.

    According to the communique signed by the National President, Comrade Samson Chijioke Ugwoke and the National Public Relations Officer, Comrade Salaam Abdussobur, the union expressed sadness that “While the two State Governments have gone ahead setting up their own Universities, LAUTECH should not be left to rot in a country where the existing Universities cannot absorb the teeming prospective entrants into Universities.”

    While noting the potentials of the university and its past contributions to national development, the union wondered why such institution should be abandoned for any reason and appealed to the federal government to halt this painful and embarrassing action of Oyo and Osun State Governments.

    They appealed to stakeholders in the Educational Sector, Traditional Rulers in the Southwest, political leaders and concerned Nigerians to take more than a passing interest in the issue of affecting the institution in the interest of Nigerian children and the future of the Nation.

    They condemn what they described as “contemptuous” the action of the Federal Government “in defiance and disrespect of the rule of law by bluntly refusing to implement the judgment of the National Industrial Court that clearly directed that Staff Schools are integral part of the University as contained in the SSANU/FGN 2009 agreement.”

    The union expressed disappointment with the recent guidelines in the 2018 Personnel Budget Call Circular dated May 5, 2017, signed by Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, Minister of Budget and National Planning, directing that workers in Staff Schools affiliated to Institutions should not be included in the Personnel Budgets of such Institutions.

     According to the union, this directive is a gross defiance of the Court judgment in respect of University Staff Schools, and an affront to democratic institutions and Rule of Law which the Federal Government professes to uphold and protect and demand that workers in the University Staff Schools be immediately integrated into the University system by including them in the budget and according them their proper status without further delay to avoid nationwide industrial action.

    The union called on the Federal Government to make public all the recovered money from politicians and public office holders and inject the money into the economy to help come out of the recession as keeping these monies in reserve or as savings while Nigerians starve, makes no meaning.

     It further advises Government to promote policies that will attract investors and prevent oligopolies in the food and building industries to save the masses these bleak situations. SSANU further advises Government to urgently negotiate with the Nigeria Labour Congress for review of the National Minimum Wage and ensure Nigerians are given living wages. 

    The union demands as a matter of urgency, the implementation of the payment of Earned Allowances being owed members of SSANU arising from the SSANU/ FGN 2009 Agreement as the continued delay is a breach of a Collective Bargaining Agreement and a dishonorable act by Government.

     While commending hate speeches, threat for secession and drumbeat of war by some sections of the country, the union called on the Nigeria workers to unite against poverty, deprivation and exploitation by members of the elite/ ruling class.

    It said “while the members of the ruling class have other places and countries to run to, the average Nigerian does not. NEC therefore urges Nigerians not to allow themselves to be used as cannon fodder by the elite class who promote all these divisions for personal, selfish and exploitative ends.

    “Observing however, that there are imbalances and inequalities in the Nigerian system, which need urgent redress, NEC urges the Nigerian people to promote dialogue with a view to deepening the National conversation, instead of violence which would bring along with it, grave consequences and repercussions.

    On the position of the association on the state of insecurity and attacks on University of Maiduguri, it said, “NEC in Session, condemns the spate of bombings in the University of Maiduguri leading to wanton destruction of lives and property of staff and students

    “While SSANU appreciates the security forces and the Federal Government for achievements so far recorded in curtailing the menace of insurgence, it urges them to do more in intelligence gathering and tasks the Federal Government to provide equipment and adequate funding to protect our Universities from violence being wreaked by these miscreants.”

  • Plateau varsity recalls suspended SSANU chairman, secretary

    Plateau varsity recalls suspended SSANU chairman, secretary

    Plateau State University, Bokkos has recalled Messrs Timnan Rimdap and Dusu Sambo, Chairman and Secretary of the varsity’s chapter of the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU), suspended in January.

    The recall letter, signed by the institution’s Registrar, Amos Mallo, said that the Governing Council, after considering the Vice Chancellor’s report on the matter, directed that the duo be recalled.

    It directed the officials to resume duty immediately, and await further directives.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the officials were suspended in a letter dated Jan. 27, 2017 and signed by the institution’s Registrar, Amos Mallo.

    Their suspension was for three months during which they received only half of their salaries.

    The letter barred the duo – Timnan, Head of the ICT unit, and Sambo, of the Academic Planning unit – from being sighted around the school throughout the period of the suspension.

    Management had attributed the suspension to “insubordination and lack of respect to constituted authority”, but sources from the Registry traced the development to the duo’s request for deduction of check-off dues of SSANU members.

    Management had insisted that it would listen to such request after registering the union, a suggestion SSANU rejected after pointing out that it had been registered at the national level and was merely establishing a local chapter at the young university.

    The school also requested members to write individual mandates allowing the school to deduct the dues, a move SSANU also objected, after declaring that the membership register was enough to warrant the deductions.

    Efforts to contact the recalled officials were not successful, but a top source from the school indicated that the duo had resumed their duties as directed.

  • Members suspension: SSANU issues 2-weeks ultimatum to Plateau varsity

    Members suspension: SSANU issues 2-weeks ultimatum to Plateau varsity

    The Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU), has given the management of Plateau State University, Bokkos, a two-week deadline to withdraw the suspension of its officials in the institution.

    The institution’s management had suspended Messrs Timnan Rimdap and Dusu Sambo, the interim chairman and secretary of the local branch of SSANU, for three months, in letters signed by its Registrar, Amos Mallo, and dated Jan. 27.

    Rimdap is the head of the ICT unit, while Sambo is a staff of the academic planning unit.

    The letters had hinged the suspension on management’s dissatisfaction with the duo’s responses to queries that bordered on indiscipline and union matters.

    Various communications on the issues culminated in the suspension of the officials, who were barred from entering the school unless permitted by the Vice Chancellor, Registrar or Chief Security Officer.

    Miffed by the suspension of its members, SSANU’s national headquarters, in a letter dated March 1, 2017 and signed by its National President, Mr. Samson Ugwoke, demanded “an unconditional withdrawal of the suspension letters”.

    It also demanded that the officials be immediately recalled to their duty posts, and “an end to the intimidation and harassment the duo had suffered over time”.

    SSANU also asked the school to commence the deduction and remittance of check-off dues of members, in line with the Trade Unions Act, 2005 as amended.

    The union accused the management of being “confrontational to the association”, and particularly wondered why it had refused to allow the union to operate freely.

    It also wondered why the management should insist on re-registering SSANU in the school, pointing out that such function was exclusively the duty of the Registrar of Trade Unions in the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment.

    SSANU described the suspension of the officials over their involvement in the union’s activities as “illegal and simply unacceptable”.

    Contacted, Prof. Doknan Sheni, the university’ vice chancellor, said that he would not be able respond to SSANU’s deadline “where I am now”.

    “Sorry, I cannot talk to you right now,” he said in response to a text message.

    But the university’s Public Relations Officer (PRO), Mr. John Agams, said that he was aware of the letter, but did not know if it had been delivered to management officially.

    “As of yesterday evening, such letter had not reached the university, but I do not know if it has been received this morning (Tuesday),” he said.

    He said that he could not speak much on the contents, adding that it was for management to decide.

     

  • Plateau State University suspends SSANU Chairman, Secretary

    Plateau State University suspends SSANU Chairman, Secretary

    The Plateau State University, Bokkos has suspended the Chairman and Secretary of the varsity’s chapter of the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU), Messrs Timnan Rimdap and Dusu Sambo Yaro.

    The suspension letters, dated Jan. 27 and signed by Mr Amos Mallo, the university’s Registrar, indicated that the suspension was for three months during which they would receive only half of their basic salaries.

    Timnan is the Head of the ICT unit, while Yaro is in the academic planning unit.

    The letters barred them from entering the university’s premises during the period “except with the express permission of the Vice-Chancellor, Registrar or Acting Chief Security Officer”.

    The officers were directed to hand over their duties and Identity Cards to the most senior officers in their departments.

    A copy of Timnan’s suspension letter indicated that he was fired after management felt dissatisfied with his response to queries bordering on SSANU issues and alleged absence from duty.

    The letter accused him of “insubordination, lack of respect to constituted authority and attempting to tarnish the image of the university through falsehood and misrepresentation of facts”.

    Sources from the Registry traced the development to the inauguration, on Nov. 23, of the school’s chapter of SSANU, by the union’s national body, and the subsequent request for members’ check-off dues by the Timnan-led interim executive committee.

    The Vice Chancellor declined the request for the dues, and insisted that he would only recognise the body after it had been registered by the school.

    Copies of numerous letters, between the management and SSANU, showed that while the former insisted on registering, before recognising every trade union, the later argued that the registration of trade unions was the sole responsibility of the Registrar of Trade Unions.

    In one of such letters, SSANU quoted section 3 (1) of the Trade Unions Act 2004, as conferring that privilege only on the office of the Registrar of Trade Unions in the Federal Ministry of Employment, Labour and Productivity.

    “The National President of SSANU – a registered trade union – has granted approval for the establishment of a branch thereof in Plateau State University and the recognition of the union by an employer is obligatory,” SSANU argued.

    SSANU, therefore, declared that it was “unnecessary and unconstitutional to have another registration with the university”.

    But management, in a memo dated Jan. 10, insisted on the registration of all trade unions so as to monitor their activities, and directed unions, intending to operate in the school, to forward a list of officials, constitution and current membership list, for registration with the university.

    It followed that up by specifically requesting minutes of the meeting where SSANU members agreed to the 2 per deduction on their salaries as check-off dues, and finally ruled that only individuals could write, granting permission to management, to tamper with their wages.

    The university management, meanwhile, frowned at the tone of letters to it, and direct text messages to the Vice Chancellor, which it considered disrespectful, and accused Timnan and the union of using unpalatable language.

    Contacted, Prof. Doknan Sheni, the university’s Vice Chancellor, said that the suspension had nothing to do with SSANU or a desire to stiffle the union.

    “No one will refuse to pay check-off dues; but we wanted to be sure that he (Timnan) was representing the union and had members’ mandate to deduct the check-off dues.

    “We asked him to produce minutes of congress meetings and, specifically, where they agreed that monies be deducted. We also wanted to know if SSANU mandated all the write-ups sent to management.

    “Instead of providing the information, Timnan was blackmailing the management and the Vice Chancellor.

    “The Registrar of the school is a senior member of SSANU; he has denied ever attending any congress meeting where deductions were endorsed,” Sheni said.

    Sheni also accused Timnan of “just disappearing from school without permission”, and described that as a “grievous offence”.

    Reacting to his suspension, Timnan expressed shock over management’s action, and wondered why he would be suspended without any prior warning, as stipulated in the university’s conditions of service.

    “The law says that one can only be suspended after two warnings; in my case, I have never been given a verbal, much less written warning,” he said.

    He said that the suspension was a “gross violation of our rights to freedom of association,” and opined that the intention was to “intimidate members of SSANU”.

    “There is nothing in the trade union act that makes it mandatory for the union to submit its minutes to any employer because the union is an independent body, but SSANU has submitted minutes of four congress meetings to the management,” he added.

    According to him, the minutes confirmed that members indeed gave their consent to the deduction of dues.

    “Such deductions are even a requirement of both SSANU constitution and the trade union act 2004,” he said.

    On allegations that he absented himself from duty without permission, Timnan said that he was sick for three days, and later had to write his examinations at Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi.

    “I applied for annual leave so as to use the time to attend to my health and write the examinations, but the leave was not approved,” he said.

     

  • SSANU demands immediate removal of three VC’s

    SSANU demands immediate removal of three VC’s

    The Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU), has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to sack the Vice-Chancellors of three universities in the country over alleged abuse of office, gross misconduct and corrupt practices.

    The Vice-Chancellor are: Prof Olusola Oyewole, Federal University of  Agriculture Abeokuta (FUNAAB), Prof Biyi Daramola, Federal University of Technology Akure (FUTA), Prof. Michael Adikwu, University of Ibadan (UNIABUJA).

    The National Vice-President of the union, Western Zone, Comrade Alfred Jimoh made the call Friday while addressing journalist at University of Ibadan, Ibadan.

    He accused Prof Oyewole of sacking their members when he discovered that they were the ones that exposed his alleged high level corruption and abuse of office alleged to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    “As at the last count, he has sacked twenty three (23) members of SSANU in FUNAAB without following due process and he is still threatening to sack more, yet he has not been able to disprove any of the allegations against him.

    “Also in FUTA, similar scenario is happening and Prof Daramola has been accused of corrupt practices and should be placed on suspension. At UNIABUJA, the Vice Chancellor, Prof Adikwu has suspended the Chairman and Secretary of SSANU without even half salary, for daring to ask question about the ongoing maladministration in the university of Abuja.

    “To the best of our knowledge, Nigerians voted President Muhamadu Buhari into power for three major reasons out of which are: Fight Against Corruption, which had become a very deadly cancer that had eaten deep into the fiber of the Nigerian society is among. It is with this in mind that SSANU as a responsible Union in the highest echelon of Nigerian education sector, has chosen to exercise a lot of constraints and understanding with the government thus far, even in the face of serious pressure from its members at the branch levels, believing that President Buhari and his government meant well with this well thought out Three-Points-Agenda.

    “This was what made SSANU to openly key into the Anti-corruption war of the Buhari Administration vide its Communique issued at the end of its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting held at the Ambrose Ali University, Ekpoma, Edo State, between 11th-12th August, 2016″.

    SSANU’s demands to  President Buhari includes;” The immediate and unconditional recall and protection of all SSANU members sacked by the rampaging Vice Chancellors (FUNAAB and UNIABUJA), Adequate protection for the lives, properties and job of all SSANU members particularly, the whistle blowers. The immediate removal of the following Vice Chancellors: (Prof. Olusola Oyewole-FUNAAB, Prof. Biyi Daramola-FUTA, Prof. Michael Adikwu-UNIABUJA). Reversal of all impunities committed by these Vice Chancellors against our members, including the ones which they use their compromised Councils to do under the guise of University autonomy. Autonomy does not include protection for impunity and thieves.

    “Immediate arraignment of the Vice Chancellors by the EFCC and ICPC. Immediate setting up of a special Visitation Panel to visit these Universities (FUNAAB, FUTA and UNIABUJA) and indeed any other universities where such infractions are found henceforth. The recovery of all the looted funds of the Universities and the prosecution of all the Vice Chancellors and individuals fingered for corruption.”

  • OAU and rule of the mob

    One image that lingered on the screen of my mind for a few days as I consciously monitored the crisis invented by the Non-Academic Staff of University (NASU) and the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) of Obafemi Awolowo University over the emergence of the process that produced Prof. Ayobami Salami as the 11th Vice-Chancellor (VC) of the university is that of the mob in William Shakespeare’s plays. Specifically, the mob depicted in the eponymous Julius Caesar possesses everything but tact, character, discipline, and structured thinking.

    As a matter of fact, as the seminal play shows, the first casualties of the mob’s actions are those adumbrated virtues. To achieve their nihilistic goals, the mob dispenses with discretion and organised thinking, speaks in decibels higher than their numerical strength, and believes its own lies and passes them off as truths. As the mob loathes civility, so does it detests justice. It does not care about the corrosive consequences of choosing evil as good.

    The OAU crisis of the last one month was inspired and sustained by the mob. The present fragile resolution puts in place by Abuja also satisfies the hankering of the mob. Let’s not pretend about it; the actions of NASU and SSANU members in OAU against the process that threw up Prof. Salami were glaringly in tandem with that of a mob. These unions behaved violently, repudiated civility, embraced indiscipline, and acted lawlessly. In their organised violence, they demanded two things and got them.

    The NASU and SSANU mob said it wanted the Governing Council of the university dissolved. President Muhammadu Buhari, the Visitor, granted it without first investigating their claims that the body was incompetent and manipulated the process leading to the appointment of a new VC. The mob demanded an Acting VC and the Visitor obliged them. The two rudderless unions boasted they could commit punishable offences and get away with them. They did – they disrupted a meeting of the Governing Council at a point and locked up the members before the Ooni of Ife came to secure their release the following day. The offences of disrupting a lawful meeting and the one of false imprisonment were freely committed by the unions without any corresponding condign legal retribution.

    Even the defunct leadership of NASU in the university hardheartedly beat up representatives of their National Executives and seized their vehicle. No comeuppance greeted that barbarous behaviour.  The unions said they could determine when school open and close. They got it. It was on account of their violent conducts that the university was shut down in June. They have also swanked that they would only ‘hand over’ the control of the school to the Acting VC of their liking. NASU and SSANU in OAU do not believe in civilised conducts. They abhor dialogue as a means of solving social problem. It is the reason they went to court but decided to take laws into their hands, declaiming that the court would not dispense justice. Governed by the mob mentality, the two unions accepted as gospel truth the misinformation given to them by certain roguish minds that the court notice they got for the Governing Council was a restraining injunction to stop the appointment process of a new VC.  They swung into destructive actions by effectively making the school ungovernable.

    For those who wonder why non-state actors thrive in the Nigerian space, I ask them to look to the weak crisis management capacity of state actors. Look to their hollow sense of justice. Those two bellicose unions in OAU did call on the Visitor and the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu (someone The Punch newspaper in one of its editorial aptly carpeted for his ‘reckless desecration of university values’), to intervene in the contrived crisis (to quote Femi Macaulay, a columnist with The Nation newspaper) before they carried on too far with their campaign of impunity. The improper intervention of the Visitor via the Education Minister in the OAU matter is another striking illustration of the present central administration’s telling incompetence in crisis management.

    The sacking of the OAU Governing Council without an investigation to establish whether it was guilty of the imagined crimes levelled against it by the two unions in the university was hasty and improper and remains an example of how the Visitor picks and chooses when it comes to obeying the law of the land. The law is clear that the Governing Council of a federal university whose tenure has not ended can be disbanded by the Visitor where an investigation proves that it is incompetent and corrupt. In fact, the Universities Autonomy Act No.1, 2007 (Section 2A) clearly states that ‘The Council so constituted shall have a tenure of four years from the date of its inauguration provided that where a Council is found to be incompetent and corrupt it shall be dissolved by the Visitor and a new Council shall be immediately constituted for the effective functioning of the University’.

    But because the Visitor is less a man of justice than it is believed, and his Minister of Education an alien to the rule of law, he gave in completely to the demands of the mob in OAU. He trampled on the law, froze the appointment of Prof. Salami, asked for an Acting VC via the back door, and eulogised that to the unquestioning public as justice. This also aligns with the unlawful sacking of 13 VCs of federal universities and their Governing Councils last March. Not even the admittance of the wrong by the Visitor compelled a reversal of the illegality.

    Let it be noted that the new peace in OAU is brittle. The solution generated by the Visitor is insubstantial. It is a rape of justice that will still boomerang. The Visitor ought to know by now that anywhere justice is contemptuously denied as in the case in OAU, unity and peace cannot reign. The cockeyed action of the OAU Visitor, to wit doing the bidding of a party to a case without even the least understanding of the core issue, has widened the gulf of disunity in that university. He has done exactly what Chinua Achebe’s Obierika in Things Fall Apart says of the coloniser: ‘He has put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart.’ The undisputable fact is that, to borrow the words of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the Visitor and the mob-like unions in OAU have only ‘scotched the Snake, not killed it’. And because the brazenly belligerent unions were not made to account for their follies and lawlessness, they will soon behave like the camel of the Bedouin in a story which after his master acceded to its request to allow it warm its nose in the room later brought in its whole body and deprived its master of his abode. It is a matter of time; the mob is forever besotted to the logic of anarchy and impunity. Anytime SSANU and NASU in OAU or those of the branches in other universities rake up impossible demands and insist on who they want as VCs but get turned down, they will resort to the rule of the mob and make the universities ungovernable.

    Alawode writes from Obafemi Awolowo University

    Ile-Ife, Osun State, Nigeria