Tag: Strike

  • NUT to meet Senate committee over strike

    NUT to meet Senate committee over strike

    The Senate Committee on Education will on Thursday meet with the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) over the non-implementation of the 27.5 per cent Teachers Enhanced Allowance.

    Also expected at the meeting are the 18 governors whose states are yet to pay the allowance.

    The states are: Benue, Cross River, Abia, Ebonyi, Enugu, Ekiti, Osun, Ogun, Oyo, Edo, Nasarawa, Zamfara, Plateau, Taraba, Borno, Kogi, Niger and Sokoto.

    The National President of NUT, Mr. Michael Olukoya, told the News Agency of Nigeria that the meeting had become imperative due to plans by the union to embark on strike from June 1.

    Olukoya said the decision to embark on an indefinite strike was taken at the end of the union’s National Executive Council meeting in Asaba on April 17.

    He wondered why some state governments were reluctant to pay the 27.5 per cent allowance and the non-implementation of the N18,000 minimum wage.

    The union had also said the non-implementation amounted to discrimination against teachers, and called on state wings of the union to embark on a stay-at-home strike.

    He said the teachers had been patient enough and stressed that the Nigerian Governors’ Forum approved the new pay structure in 2009.

     

  • Osun lecturers suspend strike

    Teaching and non-teaching staff of Osun State-owned tertiary institutions yesterday suspended their over two months strike.

    The institutions are: College of Technology, Esa-Oke; Osun State Polytechnic, Iree; College of Education, Ila-Orangun and the College of Education, Ilesha.

    The workers suspended the strike after signing an agreement with the state government.

    According to a statement signed by the presidents and secretaries of both associations – F. A. Ademiluyi, O.O. Fasipe, L.A. Jimoh and D.M. Esan – the parties have reached an agreement on the implementation of the 2009 Consolidated Salary of Tertiary Institutions (CONTEDISS) and Colleges of Education Staff Salary Structure (CONPCASS).

    The agreement includes payment of 90 per cent of the consolidated salary with effect from May 1.

    Seven per cent of the total emolument is to be sustained as Peculiar Academic Earned Allowance and the government would continue to pay 10 per cent of the basic salary as annual leave bonus.

    The statement said: “The government will continue to remit outstanding and subsequent pension contribution.

    “The government has concluded arrangement for a Group Life Assurance Scheme.

    “All other issues relating to the Contributory Pension Scheme would be addressed accordingly. The government would address understaffing as soon as the Governing Councils are put in place.

    “The issue of the 65 years retirement age, being a legal matter, will be addressed by the House of Assembly.

    “It was agreed that no individual or group would be victimised as a result of their roles in the strike.

    “In view of the foregoing, all academic staff of Osun State-owned tertiary institutions have agreed to suspend the on-going strike.”

  • No going back on proposed aviation strike- NAMA workers

    Workers of the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency ( NAMA ), said on Sunday that there is no going back on the planned protest slated for Monday.

    The protest is  to press home their demand for the implementation of the approved salary scale endorsed by National Salary  Incomes and Wages Commission.

    In a joint statement signed by  Comrade  Olayinka Abioye, Abdulkareem Motajo and Aba Ocheme, issued at the end of an emergency meeting between the National Union of Air Transport Employees (NUATE )and Air Transport Services Senior Staff Association ATSSSAN and the National Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineer (NAAPE),  on behalf of  the workers of the organisation, they  urged the public to discountenance information rolled out by the management of the airspace agency that the strike has been suspended.

    According to the unions, the meeting convened by the management of NAMA last Friday did not address the issue on ground to the satisfaction of the union’s agitations.

    He added that the meeting was expected to continue on Monday to further deliberate on issues at stake after the parties agreed that dialogue was the best way of resolving industrial crisis.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, we wish to state categorically that the ultimatum issued against NAMA shall expire 0000 hrs May 2013 and appropriate actions shall commence thereafter.  We wish to reassure all our members that no retreat, no surrender, and until all grievances  are sorted out, there is no going back on our cause of action”

    The Unions said all workers have been put on standby for the implementation of the action.

  • Strike grounds polys, tech colleges

    Polytechnics and Colleges of Technology nationwide have been on forced recess in the past three weeks.

    Although students are on campus, they are not being taught. They are however, registering for their courses and carrying out related chores since the non-academic members of staff are working. The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) embarked on the strike on April 29 over what it called the Federal Government’s failure to address its grievances. Teachers in the colleges of education with similar grievance may soon join the strike too, if the government does not act fast.

    The Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) has given the government up till May 31 to meet its demands or face a strike.

    In a communiqué issued after an emergency National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Abuja on April 18, ASUP’s National Publicity Secretary, Comrade Clement Chirman, listed the union’s demands as: non re-constitution of the governing councils of Polytechnics, Monotechnics, and Colleges of Technology; non release of government white paper of the visitation panels to the federal polytechnics; and non commencement of the NEED Assessments of the Nigerian Polytechnics.

    Others are the worrisome state of state-owned polytechnics, monotechnics, and colleges of technology; the continued appointment of unqualified persons as rectors and provosts of some state polytechnics, monotechnics and colleges of technology; and the failure of most state governments to implement the approved salary package (CONPCASS) and 65-year retirement age.

    The union also complained about the continued appointment of principal officers in acting capacity in some institutions beyond the approved periods; the insistence of the office of the Accountant-General of the Federation on the implementation of the IPPIS (Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System) module in the polytechnic; the continued delay in the amendment of the Polytechnics’ Act; the review of the Polytechnics’ scheme of service; and the non- commencement of the re-negotiation of the Federal Government/ASUP Agreement.

    The country may be in for an impending strike as this time around, ASUP is resolute about not backing down until its demands are met. The Nation’s checks revealed that the strike is in effect in state and federal-owned polytechnics.

    When contacted, Mr Adimike George of the Public Relations Department, Federal Polytechnic, Oko, said there had been no academic activities at the institution since the strike began. He said that the Senior Staff Association Nigerian Polytechnics (SSANIP) of the polytechnic is also on strike. There have also been no classes at the Bauchi State Polytechnic, The Polytechnic, Ibadan, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Lagos State Polytechnic, Yaba College of Technology, Abeokuta and many others.

    Speaking on the union’s stance last week in Abuja, National ASUP President, Chibuzor Asomugha, accused the government of “promoting dissection” in the education sub-sector by earmarking the lion’s share of the yearly education budget to universities at the expense of polytechnics and colleges of education. This imbalanced disbursement of funds, Asomugha argued, will continue to frustrate attempts at upgrading facilities in polytechnics, while creating a frightening gulf between universities and polytechnics/college of education graduates, resulting in inferiority complex of the latter.

    He said all tiers of government have refused to upgrade facilities at the polytechnics, while also ignoring the need to set up new ones in the face of technological gaps.

    “Regrettably, no sustained plan has been put in place to upgrade facilities in the existing polytechnics even when the need for setting up of new ones has not been considered as necessary for the technology development of Nigeria. In state-owned polytechnics, monotechnics and colleges of technologies, the picture is much more dismal, with minimal prospects for improvement as most authorities at that level have continued to gamble with the future of the youths of this country who have chosen to pursue careers in the technical sector,” he added.

    Of all the union’s demands Comrade Kadiri Kamoru Oluwatoyin, ASUP Chairman, FEDPOFFA and the Southwest Publicity Secretary, told The Nation that only one, the re-constitution of the governing council, has been met, and that, partially.

    “The strike is effective nationwide and it is biting harder on the government. There are 12 demands and only one out of the 12 has been partially met. When you look at the personalities on the governing council, they are 24/7 politicians. Some of them cannot even read or write; they require interpreters. But we demanded that academics should be among the governing council members before we went on the warning strike on April 22. The government has only reconstituted the council but done nothing about the members,” he said.

    Kamoru also wondered why the government is insisting on enforcing the IPPIS with polytechnic workers when it has been rejected by their university counterparts. If enforced, it would mean that the workers would be paid directly by the Accountant-General of the Federation rather than by their institutions.

    “University workers have rejected the IPPIS. We do not want it. We want the status quo to remain. If they implement it, it will not capture all our allowances. For instance, some entitled to hazard allowance, excess load allowance, will not get it. Also, those that go on Sabatical will not benefit from payment by the two institutions. We are happy with the way our salaries are being paid,” he said.

    ASUP National Vice President, Usman Yusuf Dutse told The Nation on Tuesday that the Federal Government has met with the union, promising to meet its demands that do not require legislation in three weeks.

    “Sometime last week, the Council of National Officers of ASUP had a meeting at the instance of the Minster of Labour and Productivity, Emeka Wogu, as an intervention. They have arrived at some level of commitment on the part of government. Government requested for three weeks to implement most of the issues. He said all the issues we raised that do not require legislation will be taken care of.

    The promise notwithstanding, Dutse said the strike would continue if its leaders are not convinced about the government’s sincerity.

    “The National Executive Committee (NEC) will deliberate on whether the commitment is strong enough before we take a decision to suspend the strike,” he said.

    Like ASUP, COEASU is accusing the federal and state governments of neglecting colleges of education which are saddled with the training of teachers for the primary and junior secondary education levels.

    At the Extended National Executive Council (ENEC) of the union at the Federal College of Education (Technical), Akoka, Yaba, Lagos last week, its National President Asagha Emmanuel Nkoro, berated government appointees many whom he said travel abroad but fail to replicate at home, what they see overseas.

    He warned that unless government changes its ways, kidnappings, robbery, insecurity and ritual killings, among others, will continue to dog the nation.

    “We want to also use this opportunity to warn the government. Their neglect of the sector particularly the so called less-privileged sector of the tertiary, secondary and primary education in the country is part of the strange situation and security challenges we are contending with which government has not been able to address, even after spending billions of naira,” he said.

    He lamented that the government naturally appears indifferent until the union is pressed to mount pressures on it.

    He said state-owned colleges in Osun, Kwara and Bauchi have not complied with the 65-year retirement age agreement. The schools, he added, also suffer infrastructural development particularly in Kwara.

    Asagha said the union would stop at nothing to compel states that are defaulting in developing their colleges of education.

    Their demands, some of which are similar to ASUP’s include: Forceful implementation of IPPIS; refusal of federal and state governments at all levels to implement terms of agreements regarding institutional structure and management and the conditions of service, appropriate salary structure and 65-year retirement age, especially by the governments of Kwara, Osun, and Plateau states; non-systemic approach in constituting the governing council; commencing a needs assessment exercise, amendments of the colleges system Act etc.

     

  • Osun ACN urges NLC to intervene in lecturers’ strike

    Osun ACN urges NLC to intervene in lecturers’ strike

    Osun State Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) Elder Adebiyi Adelowo has urged leaders of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to prevail on striking lecturers in the state to resume work.

    He said NLC’s intervention was necessary in the interest of education and the students, adding that the strike is doing more harm than good to everybody, including the lecturers.

    In a statement by the party’s Director of Publicity, Mr. Kunle Oyatomi, Adelowo said the interest of students, the state and the teaching profession is being compromised by the lecturers’ insistence on their demands, which he said the government is not in a position to fulfil at the moment.

    He said: “Since labour has a clear understanding of the constraining circumstances under which this government operates, the union can influence the lecturers to moderate their demands in the interest of the students, who are unfairly bearing the brunt of their actions.”

    Adelowo urged the striking lecturers to consider the government’s financial constraints and resume work.

    He said: “Under these circumstances, the lecturers’ insistence that their demands must be met or the system could collapse is self destructive, because if the system collapses, they would not survive.

    “It is, therefore, in the interest of Osun, students and all stakeholders that labour intervenes and persuades the lecturers to see reason and call off their strike.”

     

  • Ebonyi doctors on strike over colleague’s kidnap

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) in Ebonyi State yesterday said its members have withdrawn their services in all government and private hospitals.

    The NMA Chairman, Chidi Esike, said at a briefing in Abakaliki that the withdrawal was due to the kidnap of a consultant paediatrician, Dr Pius Maiyike.

    Maiyike, who works with the Federal Teaching Hospital, Abakaliki, was kidnapped on Sunday at the entrance of his hospital, Saint Mark’s Specialist Hospital.

    Eyewitnesses said the doctor drove to the hospital in his car and was waylaid by the kidnappers who waited for him on their motorcycle.

    They said: “The kidnappers abducted the doctor, shot the guard and fled in the doctor’s car.

    Confirming the incident to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), police spokesman Sylvester Igbo said the doctor was kidnapped on Sunday as he approached his private clinic at 15A, Owerri Street, Abakaliki.

    Igbo said Mauyike, who is the owner of St. Marks Specialist Clinic, Abakaliki, was abducted with his vehicle, a black BMW, by two men armed with AK-47 rifles.

    “His guard, who was identified as Peter, was shot dead as five shells of bullets were picked at the scene of the incident.

    “The body has been deposited at a mortuary, and the command has intensified efforts to trace the perpetrators of the dastardly act.

    “As at this morning, the kidnappers are yet to contact the family, though the family is yet to make any formal report to the police. Good spirited individuals informed the police about the kidnap and we are monitoring the movement of the kidnappers.

    “We are still investigating the matter and our man has been detailed to ensure stop-and-search of vehicles. We are trailing the movement of the hoodlums and we want to assure the public that we would not relent until the doctor is rescued and returned to his family safe.”

    A doctor, who spoke on condition of anonymity, decried the spate of attacks on doctors in recent times.

    “Early this year, one of our doctors was nearly blinded by an Assistant Superintendent of Police for attending to his sick wife.

    “Last week, another doctor was brutalised by relatives of a patient that died in the hospital over alleged complicity that turned out to be false.

    “Efforts should be made by relevant authorities to ensure the safety of doctors to enable them to concentrate on discharging their duties,’’ he said.

    Esike said the doctors could not continue to operate in an unsafe and insecure environment.

    “We shall, however, resume our services immediately our colleague is released by the kidnappers.

    “The kidnappers should know that doctors do humanitarian work and are not wealthy.

    “During this period, there will be no skeletal services by the doctors. It is a pity that doctors now work under siege,” he said.

    It was gathered that doctors just resumed work after a strike to protest an alleged assault on their colleague by a retired permanent secretary.

    Esike wondered why doctors should be made to face such criminality in the discharge of their duties.

    He appealed to Governor Martin Elechi, the police, State Security Service (SSS) and other security operatives to secure Maiyike’s release.

  • Why does strike have to be the labourer’s staff of office?

    I don’t know about you but any time I have watched the Senate President march in sedately behind the mace, I must admit that an emotion closely resembling envy always seems to pass through me. Seeing how big, strong and well-made the mace appears to be, I find myself wondering how well it can adapt to being used to pound yam for me on a Sunday, seeing as my pestle is no longer what it used to be. You thought I would be after the senate president’s seat? You! You! No thanks – you know, too hot and all that. Besides, I don’t think I like problems as such.

    I don’t think the country would like it very much if I were to solve senate problems with the mace, you know, like, sort of, using it to knock some sense into people’s heads during sessions. No, the country would definitely not like that and that would give me all kinds of problems, — (the country not liking it, that is, not the knocking bit). Anyway, I think we have all come to associate the mace with the amount of authority the leader has over the floor. It is his staff of office. So, every senate leader tries as much as possible to make sure it is the last thing he sees before going to sleep at night and when he wakes up in the morning. Just ask Okadigbo if you don’t believe me.

    So, every one of us needs one staff of office or the other. Have you noticed that teachers get handed chalk, duster (modernised now as marker and dust cloth) and a loud voice; and most of us think that nurses are born holding syringes, needles, and a sneering attitude, eh, have you? Your mechanic would tell you to bring the bolts and nuts (the kind that fits into your car, mind, not the kind that fits into Aro) and he would supply the spanner.

    Have you ever seen a new bride-to-be excitedly prepare herself for her nuptials? Phew! As a tribe, they make me want to whistle between my teeth. You see a bride go flitting in and out ordering and commissioning, purchasing and buying, comparing and judging, arranging and gathering and generally making sure that even if all else is forgotten or left behind in her parent’s house, the spoon and blender are not left behind. Then she clenches her teeth on those tools because they will be needed when the honeymoon is over and more importantly, they are, you guessed it, her staff of office. Me, I think I have bigger problems: how to find the words to tell her that she would need a great deal more than the spoon and blender to get the right mix of happiness.

    Anyway, I think that labourers seem to have been handed only one staff of office: no, not the shovel, anyone can handle that. It’s the strike. In the hands of labour, the strike is not only a work tool, it is also a work-to-rule tool. It is used to oil labour matters and also disrupt it. All things considered, strike is held in such esteem in labour relations that it appears to be the labourer’s only recognised staff of office. Just listen. Most men do not know the value of the food they eat at their tables until labour relations break down at home. Once, a man and his wife had a misunderstanding that resulted in the woman deciding not to cook again. In short, she declared a strike. Sounds familiar? Well, not particularly versed in the culinary art, our man was left stranded food wise. After unsuccessfully performing experiments with salt, spices and so on, and being forced to swallow the rather unsavoury results of those experiments, he quickly sued for peace, ‘for the sake of the children’, he said, but his friends contended that. Another friend once said he grew used to eating garri and dried fish whenever his mother declared her strike, which she often did.

    The causes and costs of strikes are best left to the industrial labour specialist to calculate, but let’s hazard a few guesses here. I have found that whenever my dog has been given a particular kind of food, he has declared an eating strike which has often been met with a counter strike: if he does not finish that food, he does not get anything else’. When strike meets strike, it’s quite a battle. A little like the government declaring that if workers do not return to work, they do not get paid. So, the dog lets the food rot, and the owner, not willing to allow the dog die for love or conscience, gives in, feeds the dog and all is well again.

    Is strike a simple matter of will versus will? I don’t think so, even if it appears to be a matter of who blinks first. Too often though, the government (the largest employer of labour in most third world countries such as Nigeria) thinks that a striking body of workers simply wants to test its (the government’s, that is, not the strikers’) resolve and responds with more will – leading to zero tolerance. ‘They are not returning to work? Then sack them!’ This simply causes more digging in.

    Can strike also be a matter of testing out who really holds the power in a labour relationship? That would be a little like the dog trying to find out how much he can make everyone in the house dance around just to please him. My dog tried to do that once. He rejected every kind of food placed before him for no reason and that had us worried. But when the vet gave him a quick run over and declared there was nothing wrong with him, everyone hissed and left him alone. Chagrined, he went back to eating again. The burgher.

    Often, money and conditions of service are at the heart of most strike actions. I have not yet met any employee who would claim that he is paid enough for what he does or is fully satisfied with his/her work conditions. Indeed, most employees believe, I think, that there is no reason why their employer cannot daily double the wages they are paid, and then triple it the next day. While most employees know that this is not feasible, nevertheless, I believe what most of them want really is a little respect. I think they would like to be acknowledged, not threatened.

    As we celebrate another May Day, I prefer to think that strike declaration should continue to be a sort of last resort tool. True, many labour conditions world over are simply deplorable, and most people are barely coping. It is even more annoying when you look at the Nigerian situation where the people of affluence are the unqualified who have gained unmerited access to governmental coffers and have proceeded to flaunt their privileges in the face of everyone. It indeed boggles the mind and stuns the heart into inaction. Nevertheless, considering that those who suffer from strikes are very often the innocent and those meant to be served and protected, there is a need to continue to use it minimally, cautiously and humanely. On the other hand, the welfare of Nigerian workers should not be an annoying interruption of the government’s jollification programme. It should be taken seriously so that strike will really be a rarely used implement of war.

  • SSANU shelves planned strike

    The Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) has shelved its planned nationwide strike in the universities.

    It has resolved to dialogue with the Federal Government on its grievances.

    A statement yesterday in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, by the union’s chairman in University of Ibadan (UI), Mr Wale Akinremi, said the decision followed the prompt intervention of the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Dr Emeka Wogu.

    The minister, late last night, held a meeting with the presidents of the Joint Action Committee (JAC), which comprises SSANU, the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) and the Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities and Allied Institutions (NASU).

    Akinremi said the unions agreed to sheath their swords until a planned meeting with the Federal Government on April 26.

    “The outcome of our meeting with the Federal Government will determine if we will still go on strike or not. We want all our members to remain calm and be on the alert and fully mobilise pending the outcome of the Friday meeting,” he said.

     

  • Poly teachers end strike

    Poly teachers end strike

    Lecturers of the Plateau State Polytechnic have called off their two-month old strike and asked the students of the institution to resume classes immediately.

    Nanzim Jibrin who announced the suspension of the strike on behalf of his colleagues Tuesday in Jos said the PLAPOLY branch of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) has decided to pull out of the strike after considering its legal implication.

    Jibrin, a Barrister, said: “Yes it is true we embarked on strike about two months ago but after a second thought we have realised that the union that declared the strike did not follow the due process, we have therefore resolved to pull out of it.

    “We have also realised that frequent strikes are doing serious harm to our education sector. The students are losing, the lecturers are not happy and it is not in the interest of government and parents.

    He added further: “We lecturers of the Plateau State Polytechnic have resolved to pull out of the strike. We are asking our students to resume immediately and we call on other tertiary institutions under the joint union of tertiary institutions in the state to also see reason to call off the strike.”

    Similarly, President of the Students’ Union of the institution, Comrade Victor Wilfred has praised the lecturers for suspending the strike and called on all students all over the country to resume immediately.

     

  • No going back on nationwide strike, says SSANU boss

    No going back on nationwide strike, says SSANU boss

    • Fed Govt accused of reneging on 2009 pact

    BARRING last minute development, the proposed national strike by members of the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) will begin on Friday.

    The Chairman of the University of Ibadan (UI) chapter, Mr. Wale Akinremi told reporters in his office yesterday that there was no going back on the action.

    SSANU’s National President Mr Sam Ugwoke directed his colleagues to embark on an industrial action from April 19 over the non-implementation of the 2009 pact the union signed with the Federal Government and the report of the Committee on Needs Assessment of Nigerian Public Universities.

    The SSANU chief regretted that despite several meetings of the Implementation Monitoring Committee (IMG) and its recommendations on how to implement the 2009 Agreement, with particular reference to the Earned Allowances, the government refused to show commitment to full implementation.

    He said: “What we are agitating for is for the sustenance of our public institutions; we are not strike lovers; I am not sure if Mr President is even properly briefed about our demands and if he is not and we embark on this nationwide strike, then the Minister for Education should be sacked.”

    He said over 2000 of its members in UI are now on the red alert for the strike and that mobilisation for the action began since the president’s (Ugwoke’s) declaration at the weekend.

    Akinremi said: “Other sister unions in the universities – the National Association of Academic Technology (NAAT) and the Non Academic Staff of Universities and other allied institution (NASU) – under the Joint Action Committee (JAC) have also secured the same mandate from their members to go on strike.