The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has called on the federal government to pay the withheld salaries of their members.
Members of the union at the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) Ago-Iwoye made the call yesterday during a public demonstration.
They asked the FG to pay their counterparts in federal universities or risk actions that are inimical to the academic calendar and education of the students.
The lecturers, who were led by the branch Chairman, Dr. Joel Okewale, decried what they described as “brazen show of disdain for education and the intelligentsia” by the federal government.
They expressed worries that the government had stepped up its anti- people and oppressive stance by criminalizing strike action and implementing its ‘no-work-no-pay’ on ASUU.
Okewale who addressed the rally, said government’s self-determined policy of ‘no-work-no-pay’ as well as criminalization of strike action, is alien to the university system.
He added that they would not be forced to take the ‘no-pay-no-work’ decision and still be expected to complete the 2020/21 academic session, which the the government opted not to pay for.
He said, “we would not be forced to take the ‘no-pay-no-work’ decision and still be expected to complete the 2020/21 session, which government opted not to pay for.
“We would not add to the punishment being handed down to the Nigerian children by government’s refusal to adequately educate them in order to be fully prepared for the challenges of nation building”.
“Our union finds it most uncharitable and an utter betrayal of the Nigerian nation, going by the taxpayers’ money spent on the education of this crop of politicians and the entire ruling class that they represent”.
“We commiserate with the Labour Minister, Chris Ngige, who turned from a mediator to a prosecutor just to be the servile face of the ruling elite in their efforts to keep the Nigerian masses uneducated or poorly educated and perpetually enslaved in their own country”.
“We also equally commiserate with his collaborators in and outside government for their different roles in this struggle.
“Posterity would fish all of them out for their excrescences in no distant future. Nonetheless, our union, ASUU, remains committed to the ongoing struggle against the casualization of academic appointments.
“We would not relent until the poor budgetary expenditure to education is reversed and our universities are put on the pedestal for global reckoning”.
“We are also committed to the struggle to liberate our country from the grip of neo-liberal organizations and their opportunistic collaborators in the country.
“We also use the opportunity to call on federal and state governments to review their present poor funding of education and invest in our children for the sake of our country,” Okewale said.
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