ASUU said since the present administration came to power, it has
been trying to meet with President Buhari but not successful.
Chairman of the University Of Calabar Academic Staff Union Of Universities (ASUU), Tony Eyang, has said the union will not back down until its demands are met.
ASUU
commenced a two-week warning strike on Wednesday, November 16, in
protest of the Federal Government's refusal to implement the 2009
Memorandum of Understanding with the Union among other issues.
Speaking to Vanguard on Thursday, Eyang expressed regrets that the Union had to resort to the industrial action.
"We are avowed to our responsibility to
the future of this country; it is regrettable that over and over again
we get to this point but what we have resolved to do is that government
does the needful and we will not surrender even if it means our
embarking on a total and indefinite strike for years."
According to him, the union has made several efforts to meet with President Muhammadu Buhari,
Minister of Education and the National Assembly to present to them a
firsthand view of what is going on in the education sector but their
efforts have been unsuccessful.
He said: "When the present government
came into office, ASUU exercised a lot of patience, a lot of
understating as a form a support to the government and we indicated
intention to have an audience with the President who is the visitor to
all the federal universities, the Minister of Education and the National
Assembly so as to make government see the need to address these pending
issues but that has not been granted up till now."
Eyang
added that the government never showed any commitment to address any of
the issues being agitated by the union including those that do not
involve money like the low subvention to the universities and the
Treasury Single Account, which are stifling the universities and have
turned the lecturers to beggars as salaries are not paid in full for
several months.
"There is a new form
of slavery where university teachers are not given what they are
entitled to which implies that the federal government has unilaterally
reached a decision to reduce the entitlement of academic staff of
universities which of course is against the labour law," Eyang said.
He
said the subventions to the universities have fallen in the past ten
months, which, according to him, has increasingly made the universities
unable to pay the full entitlement of its workers.
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