The Congress of Nigerian University Academics, a breakaway
faction of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, has stated what the new
union of lecturers will do differently in resolving the imbroglio rocking
Nigerian universities, particularly on recurring strike actions.
CONUA’s National Coordinator, Dr. Niyi Sunmonu, emphasised
the need to democratise the university setting, saying this was what the
academics should be after, adding that academics must look at issues from
different perspectives.
Sunmonu said there should not be a fixed perspective to
issues, noting that it should not be a thing of “only this way or the highway.”
Sunmonu, while speaking on Arise TV ‘News Night’ aired Tuesday, said the use of
strike action to press home demands in the country had been on for well over 40
years, saying, “in that period of 40 years, we’ve had different kinds of
governments, the military dictators, the democracy that we all enjoy; we’ve had
one response and that response is put pen to paper on agreement and renege on
the agreement later.
“We are of the opinion that these agreements, to us, are
actually done under duress; where you have the situation in which the other
party which is the government that you’re actually discussing with, comes to a
meeting with a relaxed mind that once they have an agreement that is workable;
when they put pen to paper to sign, they would honour that.”
Sunmonu noted that even in situations of outright wars,
“issues are resolved at the table; why can’t we devote more time to that so as
to avoid casualties? In this case, casualties are parents and students.”
“We want to deploy all our faculties, all our networks to
the area of discussions at the table that will lead to a win-win situation; discussions
that will lead to an agreement that the other side will not feel it’s being
compelled to do,” he said.
The Federal Government on Tuesday, in a bid to weaken the
influence of ASUU, registered two unions in the university system, which
included CONUA and the National Association of Medical and Dental Academics.
The Minister of Labour and Productivity, Chris Ngige, who
spoke while presenting the certificates of registration to the two unions
explained that the two bodies would exist alongside ASUU.
ASUU has been on strike since February 14, 2022. The union,
which is the most reckoned-with umbrella body for university lecturers in
Nigeria, is seeking improved welfare conditions for its members, adequate
funding for universities, and the replacement of the government-introduced
payment platform- Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System, with the
University Transparency and Accountability Solution. The latter was designed by
ASUU following complaints against the IPPIS over alleged poor standardisation
and incompatibility with the university system.
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