JONATHAN, ASUU IN
MARATHON MEETING • Meet
for over 10 hours •President
says, ‘We won’t leave until
this strike is called off’
-
Abuja. Tuesday, 05 November 2013
01:09
PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan, on Monday,
held a long meeting with the leadership of
the Academic Staff Union of Universities
(ASUU), at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
As of the time of going to press around
11.30 p.m, the meeting, which started
around 2.45 p.m, was still ongoing.
ASUU, it will be recalled, commenced strike
to press home its demands and fulfilment on
the part of the government, the agreement
they both signed in 2009.
Leaders of the striking ASUU, on Monday,
abandoned the cozy conference hall of the
First Lady wing of the Presidential Villa,
venue of their meeting with President
Goodluck Jonathan, to meet inside a Toyota
bus to consider proposal put before them in
a meeting with the president.
They had been locked in the meeting with
the president for about three and half hours
before emerging, only to hop into the bus
parked outside the venue, apparently to
have a private discussion that could not be
monitored by government agents.
The initial meeting with the president
commenced at about 2.45 p.m and lasted
till about 6.30 p.m, after which the president
left for his residence, while the ASUU leaders
walked out of the First Lady’s wing, only to
enter the parked bus to continue their
deliberation over what had been put before
them by the president.
When State House correspondents made
attempts to get the lecturers to talk, some of
them replied that they would return to
continue their discussions with the
president.
They did disembark from the bus after about
24 minutes to return to the meeting and were
later joined by President Jonathan.
The meeting continued till late in the night.
Before the commencement of the meeting,
President Jonathan had, in a lighter mood,
told them that all the contending issues must be resolved during the meeting to
enable students to go back to school.
While exchanging pleasantries with ASUU
president, he said “my president, all the
problems will be over today. Our children
must go back to school. With you here, we
are covered. It is signed, sealed and
delivered.”
With President Jonathan were Vice President
Namadi Sambo; Secretary to Government of
the Federation (SGF), Senator Pius Ayim;
Coordinating Minister for the Economy and
Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala;
Minister of Labour,ChiefEmekaNwogu;
Supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom
Wike and the Executive Secretary, National
Universities Commission (NUC), Professor
Julius Okojie.
On the ASUU side were its national president,
Dr Nasir Fagge, Professor Festus Iyayi,
Professor Dipo Fashina and Professor
Abdulahi Sule Kano, who were joined by
president of the Nigeria Labour Congress
(NLC), Abdulwaheed Omar; his Trade Union
Congress (TUC) counterpart, Bobboi
Kaigama, among others.
Earlier, a meeting between Senate President,
David Mark and the union leadership did not
yield the desired result.
Mark had been mandated by the Senate,
about two weeks ago, to mediate in the
disagreement between the unversity
lecturers and the Federal Government, over
the non- implementation of the 2009
agreement by the government.
Speaking with newsmen after a closed-door
session with Senator Mark, ASUU president,
Dr Fagge, said the intervention by the Senate
president was a welcome development in the
effort to get the crisis sorted out and for the
universities to be re-opened.
Before the closed-door meeting, Senator
Mark said “as you are aware, I have been
mandated by the Senate to meet with you
and the Federal Government to resolve this
crisis as soon as possible, so that the
children will go back to the classrooms and I
believe that is what you also want.”
Dr Fagge, on his part, noted that “members
of ASUU are not just lecturers, we are also
parents and also among us, we have
students who are pursuing post-graduate
degrees. So this strike directly affects us
negatively.”
Leon Usigbe and Dapo Falade.
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