The Federal Government may be in for some fresh troubles as the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics gets set to begin strike.
The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) has declared that it
would begin an indefinite strike from December 12, PREMIUM TIMES
reports.
The polytechnic lecturers will join their university colleagues who have been on strike for a month.
In a phone interview with PREMIUM TIMES Wednesday morning, the National
President of ASUP, Usman Dutse, said the federal government had failed
to meet the demands of the polytechnic lecturers.
Prior to this impending strike, the union had on October 2 issued a
21-day ultimatum to the government before it extended it to November.
But even then, it did not commence the strike.
But Mr Dutse said the proposed strike would be “total and indefinite”.
“This further emphasises the resolution of the 93rd National Executive
Council meeting reached at the Yaba College of Technology, Lagos last
week,” he said.
“Government has failed to implement and fulfil agreements it reached
with the union as contained in the memorandum of understanding signed,”
he said.
ASUP went on strike in November 2017; but when the federal government
reached an agreement to implement the recommendations of the 2014 NEEDS
assessment, the strike was suspended 15 days after.
The agreement particularly highlighted the need for increased funding of polytechnics.
Mr Dutse also said the roles of state government and the National
Assembly is not encouraging when it comes to funding the education
sector.
“The issue of the funding of the institutions has always been a major
concern. After the government conducted the NEEDS assessment in 2014, it
promised to implement it. Years after, there is no designed roadmap to
implement that,” he said.
He said the bill meant to review the act on the establishment of
polytechnics in the country was yet to be passed by the National
Assembly. He said the union was hoping that the strike would also help
fast-track its passage.
“The institutions are not funded. The states are even worse because
state governments just establish schools without actually funding those
schools. So, no infrastructure is in place,” he added.
The ASUP president also alleged that some state governments were owing
salaries for up to 14 months just as institutions victimise union
leaders who voice out against what he termed injustice.
“We have states that are owing about 14 month salaries. Some owe eight
months. Benue, Ogun, Osun, Edo, Kogi are owing up to as long as 14
months,” he said.
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