FG Responsible For Prolonging Strike-ASUU
The Academic
Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has accused the federal government of
prolonging the nationwide strike embarked upon by the university lecturers,
insisting that there is no going back on its rejection of the Integrated
Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS).
The union,
which described the federal government’s IPPIS as a liability to the nation’s
public university system, said its University Transparency and Accountability
Solution (UTAS) remained the only alternative to resolve the lingering
industrial impasse.
The Sokoto
Zonal Coordinator of ASUU, Mr. Jamilu Shehu, in a statement issued to
journalists on Thursday in Katsina, accused the federal government of
frustrating efforts to resolve issues that led to the lingering industrial
action embarked upon by the university lecturers.
The Sokoto
zonal office of ASUU comprises Usumanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS);
Umaru Musa Yar’Adua University, Katsina (UMYUK); Kebbi State University of
Science and Technology, Aliero (KSUSTA); Sokoto State University (SSU), and
Federal University, Dutsin-Ma (FUDMA), Katsina.
Shehu said
the unnecessary delay in honoring the 2019 memorandum of understanding (MoU)
and the adoption of the proposed University Transparency and Accountability
Solution (UTAS) was a deliberate act by the federal government to prolong the
nationwide strike.
He accused
the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, of making mischievous
statements about the union’s UTAS and threatening to invoke labour laws on
striking members of the union, saying: “The utterances are not only misplaced,
they shy away from the reality.”
He said:
“For about seven years now, ASUU had made its position clear by consistently
rejecting the imposition of Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System
(IPPIS) on its members by the government, taking into cognizance the dangers
inherent in it as far as the promotion of qualitative education is concerned in
Nigeria.
“With the
successful development of UTAS by ASUU, any further directive from the
government for ASUU members to register with IPPIS for salary payment is
suspicious and the union will continue to reject it, as IPPIS has proven to be
a liability to the university system. That is why even other sectors who
willingly enrolled are now complaining bitterly.”
The ASUU
zonal coordinator explained that IPPIS is not only a liability for the
country’s university system, but a total violation of the university autonomy
as enshrined in the University (Miscellaneous Provision) Amendment Act of 2003.

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