Nigeria

ASUU Urges Nigerians to Block FG from Accessing Pension Funds

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in the Niger Delta University, Amassoma in Bayelsa State, has urged Nigerians to resist plans of the Federal Government to use pension funds for developmental programmes.

Speaking at a press conference on Friday, ASUU chairperson Lucky Bebeteidoh stated, “Of recent, we have watched the Minister of Finance say they want to dip their hands into the Pension Fund, that is the life-saving of a lot of Nigerians.”

He stated that the law permits the Federal Government to access only five percent of the funds, “but they want to have it all” and called on Nigerians to oppose the action.

The academic staff, who protested to advocate for their demands, urged the Federal Government to honour the various agreements it signed with ASUU regarding funding for the revitalization of public universities.

Participants held signs with messages like “Enough will be enough when all the necessary positive interventions are made in public universities”, “Implement UTAS in place of IPPIS: IPPIS is not suitable for universities” and “Niger Delta University needs improved funding from the Bayelsa State Government: NDU needs staff offices, lecture halls, laboratories & hostels for students.”

Earlier, Bebeteidoh informed journalists that the contentious issues encompass the unlawful dissolution of governing councils, the release of three months’ withheld salaries, the payment of salaries for staff on sabbatical, and the disbursement of third-party deductions.

Additional concerns include the payment of Earned Academic Allowances (EAA), the proliferation of private universities, the implementation of visitation panel reports, the replacement of IPPIS with UTAS, and the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement with ASUU.

Regarding the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement, Bebeteidoh stated that following the initial payment by former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, no further payments have been made up to the present.

ASUU announced its decision to intensify media and public engagement on the government’s failure to renegotiate the 2009 agreement and initiate the process of going on strike.

Criticizing those who previously negotiated agreements for the Federal Government, he said, “Those same people who came to the union to negotiate, saying when we get into power there will be no longer strikes, ASUU will not need to go on strike. Today, it is those same set of persons that have become stumbling blocks to the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement.

“Release revitalisation funds that were budgeted for last year that have not been released. Those funds help in building infrastructure in public universities.”

NDU

Meanwhile, the union has also voiced its dissatisfaction with Governor Douye Diri, the university’s visitor, for neglecting the developmental needs of Niger Delta University.

Bebeteidoh stated “Now, coming home as a statement university, we’ve submitted letters to the state government on the 35/25% wage award. The federal academic staff have started earning it with two months’ arrears paid to them last January and we believe more arrears have even been paid with the May/June salaries.

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“We expect the state government, Bayelsa State Government, to approve the 35/25% wage award with all urgency. We’re no different from federal lecturers who have started earning it.

“On the issue of funding, we expect the state government to increase funding to the university. They chose the path of subvention. In our agreement signed September 2022, they chose the path of subvention and the subvention that they are bringing, we agreed that it should be increased annually, and it’s just been increased once.

“Infrastructural development: if you go through the university as it is presently, what you see are federal projects – TETFUND, NEEDS Assessment, NDDC – and it’s a state university.

“We are one of the few public universities that don’t have staff accommodation on campus. Staff have to commute from Yenagoa every day”.

In conclusion, Bebeteidoh said, “We are also calling on the state government to see how they can build infrastructures in the Niger Delta University.

“We need faculty buildings. Several of our faculties don’t have faculty buildings. We need staff accommodation. We need offices for staff. We need laboratories. How do you teach students without laboratories?

“And we even need hostels for students. What we have here are not hostels. We can’t in good conscience call them hostels.

“And the 35/25 per cent government should as soon as possible approve it for the staff of NDU”

Source: The PUNCH

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