If
what I read today on Vanguard Newspaper is to be trusted, then it means that
there will be light at the end of the dark tunnel. Sincerely speaking, it is
our desire that the Polytechnics and Colleges of Education in this country will
resume full academic activities, so that students can go back to school.
It’s
very sad to note that Federal and State Polytechnics under Academic Staff Union
of Polytechnics (ASUP) and Colleges of Education have been on strike for a very
long time now. So you can understand our joy in bringing you this good news. Am
not unaware that some doubting ‘Thomases’ may start throwing
diatribes at us; but all the same we decided to share this news, because we strongly
believe that this report is authentic.
Find
the report on Vanguard after this cut...
AFTER
Polytechnic students have lost an entire academic session, there seems to be a
light at the end of the tunnel, as recent developments show that the Academic
Staff Union of Polytechnics, ASUP might call off its nine-month- old strike
soon.
Speaking
to Vanguard Learning, the ASUP Zone D Chairman, Mr. Anderson Ezeibe opined that
the intervention of the National Assembly has gone a long way in resolving some
of the issues raised by the union. He said in a phone interview: “We are likely
to have an emergency National Executive Committee meeting this week. Our dealings
with the National Assembly have been fruitful so far. The committee on
dichotomy is almost done and we are just waiting for the report. We are also
waiting on a technical committee to be set up that will look into the remaining
issues when the strike is over. The commencement of this committee will form
part of the resolutions for the strike to be called off. We know that some of
these issues cannot be resolved in a day, that is why we want this committee
set up so that the issues are not swept under the carpet when the strike ends.”
It
would be recalled that polytechnic lecturers have not been paid since March
when the ‘no-work, no-pay’ policy was set in motion by the Federal Government.
Ezeibe said: “Another issue we will consider at the NEC is the Federal
Government’s commitment to pay the arrears of withheld salaries as well as the
migration of those in the lower cadre to the CONTISS 15 salary scale. We hope
to have these conditions in writing with the heads of relevant institutions
appending their signatures. If this is done, we will take the conditions to the
NEC, and the NEC will decide.”
For
the Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union, COEASU, it seems like there
might not be a shifting of grounds until June 24, when the union is set to meet
with the National Assembly. The COEASU President, Mr. Emmanuel Nkoro told
Vanguard Learning: “We have been called for a meeting with the National
Assembly on June 24 to resolve the issues. I am quite optimistic about that
meeting. I hope that we will receive an offer that we will be able to take back
to pur people. We have spent a long time on this quagmire, and we hope that the
issues will be resolved so that the strike can come to an end.”
Why
the strikes?
The
root cause of the strike is an agreement ASUP had with the Federal Government
in 2001, which was reviewed in 2009 with an agreement that it should be
re-negotiated after three years.
In
December 2012, as a result of government’s failure to address any of the
demands, ASUP issued government a 30-day ultimatum which expired on January 31,
2013.
Though
ASUP had reasons to embark on strike in view of government’s repeated failure
to address its demands, it decided to give government more time to respond; a
response that never came. This compelled the union to issue another 21-day
ultimatum on March 25, 2013 which expired on April 22, 2013 and was followed by
the declaration of a one-week warning strike which dovetailed into an
indefinite strike beginning Monday, April, 29, 2013.
ASUP
suspended the strike in July 2013 as a result of Government’s promise to
fulfill four of the 13 issues in the contentious 2009 agreement between both
parties.
These
four issues include release of the White paper on Visitation to Federal
Polytechnics, the completion of the constitution of the governing councils for
federal polytechnics, the migration of the lower cadre to CONTISS 15 salary
scale, and the commencement of the Needs Assessment of Nigerian Polytechnics.
The
union suspended the strike,and gave Government a one month time frame to
resolve the issues. But it was not until ASUP resumed its strike in January
that the Federal Government commenced Needs Assessment and completed the
constitution of the governing councils for federal polytechnics.
COEASU
on the other hand, is fighting for the first issue which is the
non-implementation of Peculiar Academic Allowance to the tune of N5.6bn,
imposition of integrated IPPIS, inadequate funding of the teaching practice,
non- accreditation of NCE programmes, non-release of Whitepaper on Visitation
Panel Reports 2011, non-implementation of CONPCASS in some states,
non-institution of dual mode which allows colleges of education the autonomy to
award degrees in core education courses to run concurrently with the NCE
programmes among others.”
Source:Vanguard

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