Academic activities may pick up next
week in the nation’s public universities as the Academic Staff Union of
Universities (ASUU) would this weekend hold its National Executive Council
(NEC) meeting to take a position on the on-going five- month-old strike.
According to Saturday Sun, national officers and branch chairmen of ASUU have arrived at the venue of the
crucial meeting to deliberate on the industrial action.
The industrial action, which enters
144 days today, took off on July 1, 2013 and has crippled academic activities
in federal and state universities.
Ahead of the NEC meeting, some
members of ASUU in two universities, Enugu State University (ESUT) and
University of Agricultural Abeokuta (UNAAB) had announced that their
institutions would open for academic activities.
Also, the authorities of the
University of Lagos despite the on-going strike have started the
screening/registration for new students offered admission for the 2013/2014
academic session.
The source told our Correspondent
that ASUU is aware of public concern about the situation in the universities
and that NEC would do the needful after deliberating on reports from the
outcome of the various congress.
According to the source, having
mourned and honoured late Professor Festus Iyayi, who died while on his way to
Bayero University Kano (BUK) for a NEC meeting by suspending the meeting, ASUU
leadership felt it was ripe to hold the crucial meeting.
He refused to give insight to the
outcome of the NEC meeting but stressed that the decision would be fair based
on the various congress resolutions of the meeting its leaders held with
President Goodluck Jonathan.
Expectations were high before the
postponed ASUU NEC meeting because of the death of its former national
President that the industrial action would be suspended after the Federal
Government shifted ground on the demands of the university lecturers.
Recalled that President Jonathan had
to intervene after the Vice President, Namadi Sambo and the chairman,
Implementation and Monitoring Committee led by the Benue State Governor,
Gabriel Suswam failed to produce positive results. At the crucial November 5
meeting with ASUU leaders in Aso Rock, the government agreed to provide
N220billion yearly for the next five years and improve on the amount to be
released for the contentious Earned Allowance.
Source: Sun Newspapers
2 comments:
Good news.
So shall it be IJN.......
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