Tag: Strike
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JOHESU Strike: UCH grounded as workers place sacrifices in hospital
Medical activities were on Thursday paralysed at the University College Hospital, Ibadan as members of the Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU) in the Hospital complied with the directives of the national body on an indefinite strike amidst pandemonium and fears.Leaders and members of the various health unions in the hospital had converged at the school of Nursing within the premises of the hospital from where they marched to the main gate of the hospital for the declaration of the strike.The Union members had converged within the premises of the hospital as early as 7am and were said to have allegedly placed sacrifices prepared inside pots at strategic locations in the hospital.To create more fears, one of fetish ‘sacrifices’ was placed few meters to the office of the Chief Medical Director of the Hospital, Prof. Temitope Alonge.Some of the items used in the preparation of the sacrifice include; pap, palm oil, palm fronts, grasses and some other items, all frightfully arranged in big brown calabash.The workers in their desperation to ensure all measure to hinder their strict compliance were jettisoned also blocked the main entrance to the hospital thereby making entrance into the hospital difficult for those who had come for medical check up or treatment.Also, leaders of the workers unions further led other members, in their hundreds to shut down their various offices in compliance with the directive of the umbrella body on the national strike.The office of the Chief Medical Director, Professor Temitope Alonge was also not sparred as he was shut out.Other areas also shut down include the power source that serve the hospital as well as instruments and equipment rooms.Addressing the workers in an emergency congress shortly before dispersing them, Chairman, Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU), UCH Branch, Mr. Olusegun Sotiloye said the unions had been pushed to the wall stressing that they had employed all peaceful means of dialogue but to no avail.He said, “I want to plead with you not to be intimidated, all your heads of department have been duly informed about this exercise, so there is no need for us to fear, the exercise is going to be total.”Other union leaders who spoke at the congrese decried the insensitivity of government to their plight stressing that the strike is total and that until their demands are met, none of the offices will be opened.Accoding to them, the indefinite strike was sequel to the failure of the government to give due attention to their demands stressing that health workers in Nigeria have been greatly marginalized and that this is the time to say no and take a stand.The various speakers also implored their members to go home and keep their phone lines open at all time as there will be need for them to be contacted for further development about the indefinite strike warning that any member that violate the procedures of the strike by reporting for duty will be sanctioned.The Nation observed that most of the offices were under lock and keys at hospital as the union leaders supervised the workers as they return to their various homes. -

Five ASUU demands FG must meet
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) suspended its five-week long strike on Monday.
This was after ASUU President Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi told reporters Monday night that they decided to conditionally suspend the strike in view of the timeline of October for the implementation of the signed agreement with the government. The meeting was a long one with the Federal Government delegation, led by Minister of Labour and Employment Dr. Chris Ngige.
Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi assured the public that the union would not hesitate to resume the suspended action should the government renege on the newly signed agreement, which he called Memorandum of Action.
Here are the five demands requested by the Association:
- Areas of agreement include funding for revitalization of public universities and the issue of Earned Academic Allowances;
- The issue of University Staff Schools;
- The implementation of the judgment of the National Industrial Court, National Universities Pension Management Company and guidelines for pension matters for professors;
- The exemption offered by the government regarding the issue of TSA, which included the issue of grants, endowment funds as well as salary shortfall, which is already being implemented by the government;
- The union also promised to submit a position paper to the Federal Government on their observation with a view for government to advise state governments.
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Parents, students hail ASUU for calling off strike
University students have expressed happiness over the decision by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to call off its strike.
Some of the students told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kano on Tuesday that they were happy to hear that the union had called off the five-week old strike.
Al’Amin Lawal, a 200 level student of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, said he was short of words to express his happiness over the new development.
“I cannot express my joy since I heard that ASUU had called off the strike because I was about to finish my semester examination when the lecturers commenced the strike,” he said.
He commended the union for the decision, saying it would enable them complete their examinations and move to the next level.
Musa Bala, a 300 level student of Bayero University Kano, described ASUU decision as a welcome development, as students would now resume normal academic activities.
He, however, called on the Federal Government to keep to the agreements reached between it and the lecturers in order not to disrupt academic activities in the universities in future.
“The Federal Government should try as much as possible to keep to the promises made to the lecturers as that will go along way in ensuring uninterrupted academic activities in our universities,” Bala said.
Similarly, most of the parents who spoke to NAN on the issue expressed gratitude to Allah for making it possible for the government and lecturers to reach an agreement on the strike.
They, however, advised the lecturers to always go for dialogue in resolving dispute rather than resorting to total strike.
NAN reports that the ASUU President, Prof Biodun Ogunyemi, on Monday in Minna directed all university lecturers to resume work this Tuesday.
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ASUU suspends strike
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has suspended the five weeks old strike.
It directed members to return to the classrooms with immediate effect.
ASUU President Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi told reporters last night after a long meeting with the Federal Government delegation, led by Minister of Labour and Employment Dr. Chris Ngige, that they decided to conditionally suspend the strike in view of the timeline of October for the implementation of the signed agreement with the government.
He said the union would not hesitate to resume the suspended action should the government renege on the newly signed agreement, which he called Memorandum of Action.
He said the agreement is backed by a definite timeline for implementation.
He warned that the government must not deliberately dishonour the agreement, adding that the continuous breach of signed agreement had been responsible for the constant strike in the universities.
Ogunyemi said the new agreement with the government is based on mutual trust between the union and the government, adding that the trust of the union must be respected by the government.
Dr. Ngige said all the grey areas had been sorted out and an agreement reached.
He said both the government and the union agreed on several issues, assuring that the agreement reached would be implemented by the government in line with available resources.
Areas of agreement include funding for revitalisation of public universities and the issue of Earned Academic Allowances, the issue of University Staff Schools and the implementation of the judgment of the National Industrial Court, National Universities Pension Management Company and guidelines for pension matters for professors.
He also said the union agreed to the exemption offered by the government regarding the issue of TSA, which include the issue of grants, endowment fund as well as salary shortfall, which he said is already being implemented by the government.
On the state universities, he said they agreed that the union would submit a position paper to the Federal Government on their observation with a view for government to advise state governments.
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Osun doctors embark on 7-day warning strike
The Osun State Chapter of Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) on Monday ordered its members working with state government to proceed on 7-day warning strike over unpaid salary arrears and poor working condition.
The NMA Chairman in the state, Dr Tokunbo Olajumoke, gave the directive after an emergency general meeting of the association in Osogbo.
Olajumoke said the 7-day warning strike was coming after the expiration of a 21-day ultimatum issued to the state government by the association to meet its demands.
“The 7-day warning strike is to commence immediately because the 21-day ultimatum issued to the state government to look into the pending issues raised by the doctors has expired.
“Within that 7-day, there will not be any form of clinical activities in all the state- owned hospitals and no doctor is allowed to treat any patient for that seven days.”
Olajumoke said that the 7-day warning strike was to allow the state government to engage the doctors in a dialogue to look into their demands.
Other grievances of the doctors are non-payment of CONMESS salary scale, over taxation, mutilated and outstanding salaries of doctors, among others.
Reacting to the strike notice, the State Commissioner for Health, Dr Rafiu lsamotu, appealed to the doctors to be patient with the state government, saying their requests were being looked into.
Isamotu said the government was committed to providing quality healthcare to the masses as well as ensuring that doctors got the best from the government.
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FG, ASUU officials meeting to end strike
The Federal Government and the leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities are holding a crucial meeting that may see the union calling off their five weeks old strike.
The meeting, according to the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige was a continuation of the meeting held between both parties on Friday.
He added that he was convinced that a concrete agreement will be reached after the meeting that will see the union calling off their strike.
He reassured them that the Buhari government was a different government committed to the implementation of all agreements reached with unions.
“If you go into other negotiations without implementation, this is a different government. That is why we put timeline in all agreement reached.”
ASUU President, Prof Biodun Ogunyemi said as a result of feedback from their members, the union held about eight hours meeting with the government on Friday and came up with concrete areas of agreement.
He said the ongoing meeting was to agree on a final document so that an agreemn t can be reached by both parties.
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Bank workers ‘won’t be part of ULC strike’
•Financial institutions, others to use NIMC verification mode
The National Union of Banks, Insurance and other Financial Institution Employees (NUBIFIE) has dissociated itself from the planned nationwide strike being called by the yet-to-be registered United Labour Congress (ULC).
It asked its members to ignore the strike and go about their normal duty.
The union’s president, Comrade Andulrasheed Lukman, said in a statement in Abuja that it has also decided to nullify its affiliation to the ULC and return to its former affiliation with the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).
Lukman said the decision to affiliate with the ULC was taken against the union’s constitution.
He said the association’s National Delegates Conference resolved and passed a resolution that it should return to the NLC.
The statement reads in part: “The new leadership of the union states categorically that the union is not aware of and will not partake in any planned industrial action as called by the ULC. The process of engaging in industrial action is well-stipulated in the laws of the land and rules of engagement.
“The union just concluded its delegates’ conference and a new leadership emerged. There are a number of issues that beg for attention in what has been happening in our industry, shutting the financial industry at this critical period of our economic life is not an option.
“The congress in session did not discuss neither did it ratify any industrial action. Therefore, we dissociate NUBIFIE from the planned action of United Labour Congress.
“The affiliation of NUBIFIE to ULC was done out of the context of the procedure and constitution of our great union and the congress in session resolved and passed a resolution for the return NUBIFIE to its original affiliation, NLC as contained in the union’s constitution.
“Consequently, NUBIFIE dissociates itself from the called strike of ULC and hereby directs all our members in the banks and insurance companies to shun any other directive contrary to this.”
But, the Director-General, National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), Mr. Aliyu Aziz, has said the commission had deployed NIMC Verification Service (NVS) to banks and other sectors, including schools and hospitals.
Aziz, who made this known at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) forum in Abuja yesterday, said the financial institutions have successfully implemented and adopted the platform.
According to him, the Application Programme Interface (API) for the NVS was deployed to institutions for effective use in accessing the data of Nigerians.
The NIMC boss stressed that it was important to harmonise insurance companies’ databases with the National Identity Database (NIDB).
Aziz said so far, the commission had registered 21.6 million Nigerians, while hoping to double this number before the end of 2017.
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Strike: FG’s tardiness, ASUU’s insensitivity
SIR: The ongoing ASUU strike has again confirmed the perception of bureaucratic laziness in our public service system. It would be recalled that the basis of the current industrial action was the failure of the government to honour the agreement she had with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in 2009. It was also the basis for which the union downed tools for about six months in 2013. Although the current administration was not in power when the agreement was made but government is a continuum. Thus failure to quickly resume negotiation with the union at the outset of this administration shows negligence of the bureaucrats in the Ministry of Education and its Labour and Productivity counterpart.
The bureaucrats in the two ministries and their supervising ministers need be reminded that their primary responsibilities are to every individuals and groups for which those ministries were created to serve.
More importantly, these strikes are always preceded by warning strikes which is meant to be a reminder. Perhaps if the union had been called to resume negotiation on the implementation of the earlier agreement, the current impasse could have been averted.
As for ASUU, there is need for a re-examination of strikes as a strategy to compel government attention to their plights as it is becoming increasingly unpopular in view of its paralyzing effects in the academic communities. Again, declaring strike anytime there is grievance on remuneration and calling it off once commitment to pay by the government is obtained while receiving salaries for the period the strike lasted places a huge moral burden on the union especially when the students at the receiving end would never regain the academic time lost to the strike action.
It is equally worrisome that ASUU only becomes visible when they are aggrieved. Beyond the fact that they comprehensively fail to draw attention to internal maladministration in their individual universities and sundry abuses of academic ethics of their members, they also fail to be counted making important contributions on critical national issues by way of position papers and policy advisories. As a bastion of academic eggheads, they are expected to be seen contributing to governance issues, offering alternative ideas and intellectual guidance particularly on economic matters which in turn affects them as an integral member of Nigeria entity. If the union continually fails in this regard but prefer only to be heard through strikes which would soon outlive its usefulness, the union would no longer be taken seriously other than a crop of academic rebel seeking relevance.
- Muftau B. Tijani,
University of Lagos.
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Resident doctors suspend strike
The nationwide strike by the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has been suspended.
National President of the association, Dr. John Onyebueze who announced the suspension in a statement in the early hours of Thursday said doctors decided to suspend the strike after considering efforts made by government in addressing their demands.
He therefore directed all doctors to go back to work with effect from 8.00am on Friday.
The one paragraph statement reads: “After due consideration of the efforts by Government and progress made in addressing the items on the notice of our ultimatum, and strike, as well as implementing the contents of the re-negotiated MTS, NARD resolved to suspend her 10 days strike, and to reassess situation in two weeks at our AGM in Abuja.
“Accordingly, members are to resume work 8:00am, Friday, 15th September, 2017.”
The government and the doctors had signed a memorandum of terms of settlement which they were supposed to have been reviewed last Friday and suspend the strike after receiving alert for the payment of their salary shortfall.
The doctors however failed to call off their strike in line with terms of settlement signed with the Federal Government.
Days after the supposed meeting to call off the strike, the doctors continued to keep silent about the industrial action, fueling speculations that they may have rejected the terms of settlement.
The strike was called to force government to meet doctors demands and pay their salary short fall.
Medical services in government hospitals had been disrupted nationwide with patients not attended to.
DEMANDS
Among other demands, the doctors are protesting the sack of some of their colleagues, non-payment of “skipping’’ entitlement, non-inclusion in the IPPIS platform and non-payment of their salary arrears.
The federal government at the meeting had agreed to terms of settlement with the association, assuring that it will pay the arrears and commence the inclusion of NARD members in the IPPIS platform.
In an earlier interview with NAN, Dr Arikawe Adeolu, a member of the National Executive Council of NARD, said the association was waiting on the federal government to redeem its pledge before the strike could be called off.
Adeolu said that more than half of members of the association were yet to receive their arrears, claiming that government is also yet to meet its other demands in the terms of settlement.
He said that the association would therefore hold a meeting to assess the response of government to its demands.
“We were supposed to hold a meeting on Sept. 8 but it didn’t hold because the essence of the meeting was defeated.
“We thought that government would have paid by then but we got nothing so the meeting has been postponed to September 12; it will be a closed door meeting to carry out an appraisal of events so far,’’ he said.
NAN reports that the meeting which was slated to hold on Sept. 12 was however rescheduled to hold on Sept. 13. (NAN)
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Reflecting on yet another ASUU strike
Many of us in Nigeria and particularly in the education sector have lost count of the number of strikes by university workers. The first strike that I remember vividly because I participated in it was the “industrial action” in 1973 taken against our employers, the federal government which owned the universities of Ibadan and Lagos, and the state governments that were the owners of the university of Nigeria (Nsukka) Ahmadu Bello University and the University of Ife. I was then in the University of Ibadan – Jos Campus. The University of Ibadan under Professor Adeoye Lambo was invited to establish a university college in Jos by Joseph Gomwalk, an alumnus zoology graduate of Ibadan who as police commissioner was the military governor of the then Benue-Plateau State. Stories had it that he approached Ibadan after Ahmadu Bello University for political reasons turned him down. The college was therefore established in 1972 under the energetic and indefatigable Professor Emmanuel Ayandele. University staff then were not highly paid but they earned enough comparable with others in the public sector.
When the strike was called, the Yakubu Gowon government reacted negatively and gave an ultimatum that university staff should either call off the strike or pack out of university accommodation. This was a wakeup call for senior university people who were living comfortably in university accommodation without the thought of owning their own houses. The government’s tough approach did the trick and the strike was called off. The university people learnt a bitter lesson from the experience. Those who had been in service for a long time began to look for land to build their own houses and they set the example for the younger ones to follow. I remember that Governor J.D .Gomwalk gave us plots in the GRA for us to build our homes in Jos. Some paid for the plots of land, but out of short-sightedness, most of us felt we were too young to be thinking of personal houses. Those also were the years of idealism when young people like us despised materialism and primitive accumulation of wealth.
In those days, there was only one union in the university system unlike now when there are as many as seven or more if one includes the various unions in the university teaching hospitals. It will be wonderful if ASUU can just be “Association and Staff Union of Universities “to embrace all the existing unions and every category of staff can enter whatever salary scale approved for the entire university system at its own level. This will take care of academic, administrative, technical, clerical and cleaning staff. With the trend noticeable in private universities and universities in the rest of the world, there will soon be no need of those doing “bullshit” jobs in the universities.” Bullshit “jobs according to London School of Economics anthropologist David Graeber are jobs that add no value to the economy and that can be dispensed with and the people doing them know that their positions are superfluous. There are many jobs like that in our country including jobs of ambassadors! While on this, my rather sometimes probing ambassador-friend, Dapo Fafowora once cynically challenged me by saying many university people have no skills and wondered what skill I had. I mumbled something about being a teacher, writer, public intellectual and so on. But on reflection my job may not be critical to society as that of garbage collectors! I have just read a book with the title of “Utopia for realists and how we can get there” by a Dutch historian by the name of Rutger Bregman. The book has kept me thinking. He gave a comparative importance of garbage collectors in New York going on strike and after six stinking days, the mayor had to be begging them with huge salaries and pleading with them to save the city from being overrun by rats and stench. He compared it with the case of bankers who went on strike for six months in Ireland while people devised other mechanics of shifting wealth from one to the other!
The point I want to make is that while the job of teaching from primary to tertiary levels of education is very important and should be recognized and adequately compensated, this must be balanced with other critical sectors needing resources. There is no point asking for the moon during a period of economic recession. By the way, I hope this time around, government will consolidate salaries and “earned or unearned allowances” which have been the knotty problem for university administrators in recent times. The second point I want to make is to ask how adequately have we as teachers transmitted to our students the right kind of culture that would be beneficial to our country. Do we impart the right kind of knowledge to our students?. Do we just equip our students for the work place or do we put emphasis on the good of society rather than what is personally beneficial ?Of course there is the eternal argument of the role of parents and society in shaping the character of young people who will grow up to hold leadership positions in our society. Our universities should aspire to be incubators of ideas and centres of patents that could be harnessed to dominate our environment and make our lives better rather than shunning out esoteric researches that are totally irrelevant to the questions of development and societal progress.
I will like to see academics get more involved in debating the future political, structural and economic trajectory of this country instead of just taking care of ourselves alone. There is the debate going on in western societies about the desirability of paying everybody a basic universal income irrespective of whether one was working or not. The present government is doing something like this following on the paradigm established by Kayode Fayemi in Ekiti State where poor elderly women were being paid N5000 per month. Imagine the effect it will have on our country if all unemployed people were given a living basic income monthly. This may sound an outrageous suggestion. But it is being done in some places and we must be thinking of how to adapt it to our clime. Imagine if all those who want to work and cannot find jobs were each paid N20,000 a month with promise of housing along the line. What this will mean is that we will have to cap the maximum anybody earns in this country. This will mean we will radically reduce salaries and allowances of federal, state and local government officials and their bureaucracies. If all were catered for, we will not need a huge army, police, prisons and many other security organizations. Whatever is saved on these institutions will go into the basic fund from which the income will be paid to the masses of our hungry people. The fact that this sounds idealistic does not mean it cannot be done. There are trials on the universal basic income concept albeit on limited scale going on in Canada, New Zealand and in some places even in the USA.
Before we arrive at this future utopia, I will like to suggest that the universities should be asked to have one union embracing all workers who work in the universities. If the purpose of higher education is teaching, research and public service, then everybody in the university system should work symbiotically with each other. Eventually the supporting staff in the university system will gradually reduce as it has all over the world because of increasing advance in technology. The days of clerks and secretaries are gone or going in many universities. In future, budgets of universities will be solely for research and technical support and the vast administrative paraphernalia in the universities will wither away. Universities will also gradually not be involved in providing municipal services and good universities will be able to generate their own power and provide water for their own use.
Finally our governments must realize that universities are expensive to run and heads of governments must avoid after dinner announcements about opening of new universities without counting the cost. All this glib talk of universities of petroleum, university of transportation, marine university must stop. We should consolidate and possibly merge the ones we have so as to save costs. The government by giving license to all sorts of characters to establish universities has demeaned and devalued the cultural significance of universities. Some of the private universities, especially the sectarian ones and a few others are excellent institutions contributing to shaping the character of the youth while also imparting knowledge to them but some of the existing private universities are caricatures of universities and fraudulent institutions sucking money out of deluded Nigerians looking for easy way out of this rather difficult Nigerian educational environment.