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pressure group representing the interests of staff of Nigerian
polytechnics has embarked on a warning strike to attract the attention
of the government to its urgent demands.
Polytechnic lecturers, under the auspices of the Academic Staff
Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), will begin a nationwide one-week warning
strike from Monday next week.
Already, the union has directed its members in all public polytechnics across the federation to ensure total compliance.
Addressing a press conference in Abuja on Wednesday, President of
ASUP, Usman Dutse, said there would be no academic and administrative
activity any public polytechnic between 12 noon of 30 January, 2017 and 6
February, 2017.
He said: “The union therefore resolved at the emergency meeting
of the National Executive Council (NEC), held on the 25 January 2017 to
embark on a one week warning strike effective 12 noon, January 30, 2017
to 6 February 2017 in the first instance.
“Members are therefore directed to ensure total compliance as
no academic and administrative activity is expected in any public
polytechnic across Nigeria within the period; and await further
directives from the union’s organs.”
Comrade Dutse pointed out that the union had on two occasions in
July and November last year communicated the decision of its NEC to
withdraw the services of its members if a number of issues identified as
undermining the sector are not addressed.
Specifically, on 14 November 2016, the correspondence to government
conveyed a one month ultimatum to the government on the issues in
contention.
Regrettably, the ASUP president stated that despite “the
severity of the issues listed, government has not, within the
intervening period demonstrated enough passion to address them , leaving
the union with no choice especially as we have demonstrated enough
patience in deferring the decision since August 2016.”
The issues in contention include the non-implementation of the
report of the NEEDS Assessment report which as at July 2014 revealed
that public polytechnics and Colleges of Technology in Nigeria require
injection of minimum of N652.6million to address the rot in
infrastructure in the sector; sustained poor funding of public
polytechnics as shown in the poor but yet unimplemented capital grant to
polytechnics and deliberate attempts at frustrating the resolution of
the meeting of the Council on Establishment held in July 2016 on the
removal of entry level dichotomy against HND holders .
Other issues are victimization of union officials, non-release of
union check off dues and interference in union activities; non-release
of CONTISS 15 migration arrears; release of visitation panel report of
Federal polytechnics and report of Ministerial panels to Federal
polytechnics in Auchincloss, Oko’ Yaba and Ado-Ekiti; delay in the
review of the Federal Polytechnic Act; non-commencement of renegotiation
of the ASUP/government agreement of 2010 and government’s tardiness in
the appointment of Rectors of Federal polytechnics.
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