ASUU Insists On 14-Day Ultimatum To FG, Says 84 Members Dead From Hardship

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has raised concerns over the deaths of 84 of its members within three months, citing economic hardship and unpaid salaries as key factors.

The ASUU President, Emmanuel Osodeke, revealed this during an interview on Inside Sources with Laolu Akande, aired on Channels TV.

β€œIn the past three months, from May to August (2024), Nigerian universities lost 84 academics to death. In three months, because of what our people are going through,” Osodeke stated.

He lamented the government’s failure to pay withheld salaries, saying, β€œDespite this crisis, you are holding somebody’s three-and-half or more salaries on the no-work, no-pay, you are owing this money.

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β€œPeople are trying to survive, you introduced fuel increase, you introduced electricity increase, and everything is gone now.”

Osodeke also called for increased funding in the education sector, emphasizing that lecturers must be motivated for universities to function effectively.

He disclosed that despite being a professor for 15 years, he earns only N420,000 monthly, stressing that Nigerian lecturers cannot compete globally without better pay.

On September 25, 2024, ASUU issued a 14-day ultimatum to the Federal Government, demanding the resolution of several issues, including the renegotiation of the 2009 FGN/ASUU Agreement and the payment of withheld salaries from the 2022 strike.

In 2022, both academic and non-academic unions embarked on an eight-month strike, after which the government implemented a no-work, no-pay policy. President Bola Tinubu later approved the release of four months’ salaries in October 2023, but ASUU insists that the entire eight months’ withheld salaries must be paid.

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ASUU members received four months of their owed wages, while other unions, such as SSANU and NASU, have yet to be paid. The government is considering a half-pay solution for non-academic unions, according to education minister, Tahir Mamman.

Osodeke argued that paying only four months is not a favour, stating that lecturers deserve full payment for the entire strike period.

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