The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, believes the suspension of the strike embarked on by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), is dependent on the union.
Ngige made the comment when he featured on Channels Television’s Politics Today on Thursday, calling for the varsity lecturers to be considerate.
“It depends on ASUU. The ball is in their court. They should go and meet the Benimi Briggs Committee and look at what the committee is doing and make further inputs so that the work can be accelerated,” he said.
NGIGE who reiterated that he cannot make a commitment on when the impasse will be resolved, called on the lecturers to do their part. According to him, ASUU should stop threatening government officials and agencies.
The minister stressed his worrying over the incessant strikes in public universities in Nigeria, stressing that “he has not slept” in a bid to see that the schools are reopened.
“The ASUU issue is a recurring decimal,” he said, recalling that the union has gone on many strikes in the last two decades.
He noted that there would be a meeting of all stakeholders next week as part of moves to resolve the lingering strike.
Before Ngige’s latest remarks, ASUU had accused the Federal Government of unseriousness in meeting their demands.
President of the union, Emmanuel Osodeke, faulted the government’s budgeting of money for the payment of fuel subsidy and wondered why it is difficult settling the lecturers.
More than two months since lecturers downed tools, the ASUU president alleged that the government has been insensitive to the union’s demands.
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