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Strike: FG, ASUU Silent After Meeting, Constitute Visitation Panel

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The federal government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) on Thursday declined to disclose the outcome of their meeting over the nine-month long strike by Nigerian university teachers.

The federal government led by the minister of labour Chris Ngige hinted at the creation of a visitation panel which will be Inaugurated next week.

The meeting was expected to lead to the call off of the strike but apparently ended without meeting that objective.

The closed-door meeting, held at the conference hall of the Ministry of Labour and Employment, was scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. but began at 5:20 p.m. and lasted until 8:18 p.m., with representatives of the parties refusing to brief the waiting journalists on its outcome.

Before the meeting started, the Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, said the late start was owing to consultations that were still ongoing by Thursday morning at the Ministry of Finance.

“We on the government side went to consult our stakeholders, and the consultations were still on till this morning. We are starting late because the consultations were on up till this morning at the Federal Ministry of Finance,” he said.

Mr Ngige also said he was optimistic about the meeting.

Also speaking, the President of ASUU, Biodun Ogunyemi, said he shared the minister’s optimism.

“As soon as the situation is conducive enough, our members are willing and ready to resume work,” he said.

He said he hoped that the government would come up with something favourable to report back to the union members.

Newsmen reported how the last meeting, which held in November, ended with the government making new proposals to the union which ASUU said it was immediately taking to its members for consideration.

Speaking with journalists after that meeting, Mr Ngige said the two parties had agreed on the core issues at the heart of their prolonged dispute.

These include funding for the revitalisation of universities, earned allowances, the shortfall in salaries, visitation panels for universities, and the use of the University Transparency and Accountability Solution (UTAS).

“In our last meeting, we agreed on so many things. Today we have discussed the issues again. As you know, there are about eight issues. We have done justice to all these and ASUU is supposed to take our conclusions to their organs. I do hope as a conciliator that there is a light at the end of the tunnel as I do hope ASUU will come back to us,” Mr. Ngige had said

Speaking on the constitution of visitation panels for public universities, Mr. Ngige said the panels would be inaugurated in the incoming week and would conclude their assignments on December 31.

“They will look at issues arising from the last 10 years in those federal universities broken down into five years compartments,” he said.

On the issue of withheld salaries, Mr Ngige said the ministries of labour and education would review the issue of ‘no work, no pay’ as stipulated in Section 43 of the Trade Disputes Act Cap T8 laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004, with a view to getting approval for the withheld salaries to be paid.

“By Monday we will start the work on it, as soon as we finish because there is a transition period between the formalization of IPPIS, formalisation of UTAS.”

End.

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